tetracycline has been researched along with Body-Weight* in 110 studies
3 review(s) available for tetracycline and Body-Weight
Article | Year |
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Unprecedented community containment measures were taken following the recent outbreak of COVID-19 in Italy. The aim of the study was to explore the self-reported future compliance of citizens with such measures and its relationship with potentially impactful psychological variables.. An online survey was completed by 931 people (18-76 years) distributed across the Italian territory. In addition to demographics, five dimensions were measured: self-reported compliance with containment measures over time (today, at 7, 14, 30, 60, 90, and 180 days from now) at three hypothetical risk levels (10, 50, 90% of likelihood of contracting the COVID-19), perceived risk, generalized anxiety, intolerance of uncertainty, and relevance of several psychological needs whose satisfaction is currently precluded.. The duration of containment measures plays a crucial role in tackling the spread of the disease as people will be less compliant over time. Psychological needs of citizens impacting on the compliance should be taken into account when planning an easing of the lockdown, along with interventions for protecting vulnerable groups from mental distress.. La apendicitis aguda (AA) es la urgencia quirúrgica abdominal más frecuente. No encontramos estudios específicos que evalúen el impacto de la pandemia causada por el coronavirus 2 (SARS-Cov-2) sobre la AA y su tratamiento quirúrgico. Analizamos la influencia de esta nueva patología sobre la AA.. Estudio observacional retrospectivo en pacientes intervenidos por AA desde enero hasta abril de 2020. Fueron clasificados según el momento de la apendicectomía, antes de la declaración del estado de alarma (Pre-COVID19) y después de la declaración del estado de alarma (Post-COVID19) en España. Se evaluaron variables demográficas, duración de la sintomatología, tipo de apendicitis, tiempo quirúrgico, estancia hospitalaria y complicaciones postoperatorias.. La pandemia por SARS-Cov-2 influye en el momento de diagnóstico de la apendicitis, así como en su grado de evolución y estancia hospitalaria. La peritonitis fue lo más frecuentemente observado. Una sospecha y orientación clínica más temprana, es necesaria para evitar un manejo inadecuado de este trastorno quirúrgico común.. The primary outcome is improvement in PaO. Findings will provide timely information on the safety, efficacy, and optimal dosing of t-PA to treat moderate/severe COVID-19-induced ARDS, which can be rapidly adapted to a phase III trial (NCT04357730; FDA IND 149634).. None.. The gut barrier is crucial in cirrhosis in preventing infection-causing bacteria that normally live in the gut from accessing the liver and other organs via the bloodstream. Herein, we characterised gut inflammation by measuring different markers in stool samples from patients at different stages of cirrhosis and comparing this to healthy people. These markers, when compared with equivalent markers usually measured in blood, were found to be very different in pattern and absolute levels, suggesting that there is significant gut inflammation in cirrhosis related to different immune system pathways to that seen outside of the gut. This provides new insights into gut-specific immune disturbances that predispose to complications of cirrhosis, and emphasises that a better understanding of the gut-liver axis is necessary to develop better targeted therapies.. La surveillance de l’intervalle QT a suscité beaucoup d’intérêt durant la pandémie de la COVID-19 en raison de l’utilisation de médicaments prolongeant l’intervalle QT et les préoccupations quant à la transmission virale par les électrocardiogrammes (ECG) en série. Nous avons posé l’hypothèse que la surveillance en continu de l’intervalle QT par télémétrie était associée à une meilleure détection des épisodes de prolongation de l’intervalle QT.. Nous avons introduit la télémétrie cardiaque en continu (TCC) à l’aide d’un algorithme de surveillance automatisée de l’intervalle QT dans nos unités de COVID-19. Les mesures automatisées quotidiennes de l’intervalle QT corrigé (auto-QTc) en fonction de la fréquence cardiaque maximale ont été enregistrées. Nous avons comparé la proportion des épisodes de prolongation marquée de l’intervalle QTc (QTc long), définie par un intervalle QTc ≥ 500 ms, chez les patients montrant une suspicion de COVID-19 ou ayant la COVID-19 qui avaient été admis avant et après la mise en place de la TCC (groupe témoin. La surveillance en continu de l’intervalle QT est supérieure à la norme de soins dans la détection des épisodes de QTc long et exige peu d’ECG. La réponse clinique aux épisodes de QTc long est sous-optimale.. Exposure to a model wildfire air pollution source modifies cardiovascular responses to HC challenge, suggesting air pollution sensitizes the body to systemic triggers.. Though the majority of HIV-infected adults who were on HAART had shown viral suppression, the rate of suppression was sub-optimal according to the UNAIDS 90-90-90 target to help end the AIDS pandemic by 2020. Nonetheless, the rate of immunological recovery in the study cohort was low. Hence, early initiation of HAART should be strengthened to achieve good virological suppression and immunological recovery.. Dust in Egyptian laying hen houses contains high concentrations of microorganisms and endotoxins, which might impair the health of birds and farmers when inhaled. Furthermore, laying hens in Egypt seem to be a reservoir for ESBL-producing Enterobacteriaceae. Thus, farmers are at risk of exposure to ESBL-producing bacteria, and colonized hens might transmit these bacteria into the food chain.. The lack of significant differences in the absolute changes and relative ratios of injury and repair biomarkers by contrast-associated AKI status suggests that the majority of mild contrast-associated AKI cases may be driven by hemodynamic changes at the kidney.. Most comparisons for different outcomes are based on very few studies, mostly low-powered, with an overall low CoE. Thus, the available evidence is considered insufficient to either support or refute CH effectiveness or to recommend one ICM over another. Therefore, further well-designed, larger RCTs are required.. PROSPERO database Identifier: CRD42016041953.. Untouched root canal at cross-section perimeter, the Hero 642 system showed 41.44% ± 5.62% and Reciproc R40 58.67% ± 12.39% without contact with instruments. Regarding the untouched area, Hero 642 system showed 22.78% ± 6.42% and Reciproc R40 34.35% ± 8.52%. Neither instrument achieved complete cross-sectional root canal debridement. Hero 642 system rotary taper 0.02 instruments achieved significant greater wall contact perimeter and area compared to reciprocate the Reciproc R40 taper 0.06 instrument.. Hero 642 achieved higher wall contact perimeter and area but, regardless of instrument size and taper, vital pulp during. The functional properties of the main mechanisms involved in the control of muscle Ca. This study showed that the anti-inflammatory effect of the iron-responsive product DHA in arthritis can be monitored by an iron-like radioactive tracer (. Attenuated vascular reactivity during pregnancy suggests that the systemic vasodilatory state partially depletes nitric oxide bioavailability. Preliminary data support the potential for MRI to identify vascular dysfunction in vivo that underlies PE. Level of Evidence 2 Technical Efficacy Stage 1 J. MAGN. RESON. IMAGING 2021;53:447-455.. La evaluación de riesgo es importante para predecir los resultados postoperatorios en pacientes con cáncer gastroesofágico. Este estudio de cohortes tuvo como objetivo evaluar los cambios en la composición corporal durante la quimioterapia neoadyuvante e investigar su asociación con complicaciones postoperatorias. MÉTODOS: Los pacientes consecutivos con cáncer gastroesofágico sometidos a quimioterapia neoadyuvante y cirugía con intención curativa entre 2016 y 2019, identificados a partir de una base de datos específica, se incluyeron en el estudio. Se utilizaron las imágenes de tomografía computarizada, antes y después de la quimioterapia neoadyuvante, para evaluar el índice de masa muscular esquelética, la sarcopenia y el índice de grasa visceral y subcutánea.. In this in vitro premature infant lung model, HF oscillation of BCPAP was associated with improved CO. Our results showed that HPC significantly promotes neurogenesis after MCAO and ameliorates neuronal injury.. Inflammatory markers are highly related to signs of systemic hypoperfusion in CS. Moreover, high PCT and IL-6 levels are associated with poor prognosis.. These findings indicate that Tetrapleura tetraptera fruit has a protective potential against stroke through modulation of redox and electrolyte imbalances, and attenuation of neurotransmitter dysregulation and other neurochemical dysfunctions. Tetrapleura tetraptera fruit could be a promising source for the discovery of bioactives for stroke therapy. Topics: 3T3-L1 Cells; A Kinase Anchor Proteins; Acetates; Achilles Tendon; Acute Kidney Injury; Acute Pain; Acyclic Monoterpenes; Adenine Nucleotides; Adhesins, Escherichia coli; Adipocytes; Adipocytes, Brown; Adipogenesis; Administration, Inhalation; Administration, Oral; Adrenal Cortex Hormones; Adsorption; Adult; Aeromonas hydrophila; Africa; Aged; Aged, 80 and over; Agrobacterium tumefaciens; Air; Air Pollutants; Air Pollution; Air Pollution, Indoor; Algorithms; Alkaloids; Alkynes; Allosteric Regulation; Amines; Amino Acid Sequence; Amino Acids; Amino Acids, Branched-Chain; Aminoisobutyric Acids; Aminopyridines; Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis; Anaerobic Threshold; Angiography; Angiotensin II Type 1 Receptor Blockers; Angiotensin Receptor Antagonists; Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme Inhibitors; Animal Distribution; Animal Feed; Animal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena; Animals; Ankle Joint; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Anti-HIV Agents; Anti-Inflammatory Agents; Antibodies, Bacterial; Antifungal Agents; Antimalarials; Antineoplastic Agents; Antineoplastic Agents, Phytogenic; Antioxidants; Antiretroviral Therapy, Highly Active; Antiviral Agents; Aotidae; Apelin; Apoptosis; Arabidopsis Proteins; Argentina; Arginine; Artemisinins; Arthritis, Experimental; Arthritis, Rheumatoid; Arthroscopy; Aspergillus; Aspergillus niger; Asteraceae; Asthma; ATP Binding Cassette Transporter, Subfamily B, Member 1; ATP Binding Cassette Transporter, Subfamily G, Member 2; Auditory Cortex; Autoantibodies; Autophagy; Bacteria; Bacterial Infections; Bacterial Proteins; Bacterial Typing Techniques; Base Composition; Base Sequence; Basketball; Beclin-1; Benzhydryl Compounds; Benzimidazoles; Benzo(a)pyrene; Benzofurans; Benzoxazines; Bereavement; beta Catenin; beta-Lactamase Inhibitors; beta-Lactamases; beta-Lactams; Betacoronavirus; Betaine; Binding Sites; Biofilms; Biological Assay; Biological Availability; Biological Evolution; Biomarkers; Biomechanical Phenomena; Biopolymers; Biopsy; Bismuth; Blood Glucose; Blood Platelets; Blood Pressure; Body Composition; Body Weight; Bone Marrow; Bone Marrow Cells; Bone Regeneration; Boron; Botrytis; Brain Ischemia; Brain Neoplasms; Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor; Brazil; Breast Neoplasms; Breath Tests; Bronchoalveolar Lavage Fluid; Burkholderia; C-Reactive Protein; Caenorhabditis elegans; Caenorhabditis elegans Proteins; Calcification, Physiologic; Calcium; Calcium Signaling; Calorimetry, Differential Scanning; Cameroon; Camptothecin; Candida; Candida albicans; Capillaries; Carbapenem-Resistant Enterobacteriaceae; Carbapenems; Carbohydrate Conformation; Carbon; Carbon Dioxide; Carbon Isotopes; Carcinoma, Ovarian Epithelial; Cardiac Output; Cardiomyopathy, Hypertrophic; Cardiotonic Agents; Cardiovascular Diseases; Caregivers; Carps; Case-Control Studies; Catalase; Catalysis; Cats; CD4 Lymphocyte Count; Cell Culture Techniques; Cell Differentiation; Cell Line, Tumor; Cell Membrane; Cell Movement; Cell Proliferation; Cell Survival; Cells, Cultured; Cellulose; Centrosome; Ceratopogonidae; Chickens; Child; China; Cholera Toxin; Choline; Cholinesterases; Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid; Chromatography, Liquid; Chromatography, Micellar Electrokinetic Capillary; Chromatography, Reverse-Phase; Chronic Disease; Cinnamates; Cities; Citrates; Climate Change; Clinical Trials, Phase III as Topic; Coal; Coal Mining; Cohort Studies; Coinfection; Colchicine; Colony Count, Microbial; Colorectal Neoplasms; Coloring Agents; Common Cold; Complement Factor H; Computational Biology; Computer Simulation; Continuous Positive Airway Pressure; Contrast Media; Coordination Complexes; Coronary Artery Bypass; Coronavirus 3C Proteases; Coronavirus Infections; Coronavirus Protease Inhibitors; Corynebacterium glutamicum; Cosmetics; COVID-19; Creatinine; Cross-Sectional Studies; Crotonates; Crystallography, X-Ray; Cues; Culicidae; Culture Media; Curcuma; Cyclopentanes; Cyclopropanes; Cymbopogon; Cystine; Cytochrome P-450 CYP2B6; Cytochrome P-450 CYP2C19; Cytochrome P-450 CYP2C19 Inhibitors; Cytokines; Databases, Genetic; Death; Dendritic Cells; Density Functional Theory; Depsides; Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2; Diamond; Diarylheptanoids; Dibenzofurans; Dibenzofurans, Polychlorinated; Diclofenac; Diet; Dietary Carbohydrates; Dietary Supplements; Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging; Dioxins; Diphenylamine; Disease Outbreaks; Disease Susceptibility; Disulfides; Dithiothreitol; Dizocilpine Maleate; DNA Methylation; DNA-Binding Proteins; DNA, Bacterial; Dogs; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Double-Blind Method; Doublecortin Protein; Drosophila melanogaster; Droughts; Drug Carriers; Drug Combinations; Drug Delivery Systems; Drug Liberation; Drug Resistance; Drug Resistance, Bacterial; Drug Resistance, Neoplasm; Drug Screening Assays, Antitumor; Dust; Dynactin Complex; Dysferlin; Echo-Planar Imaging; Echocardiography; Edaravone; Egypt; Elasticity; Electrodes; Electrolytes; Emodin; Emtricitabine; Endometriosis; Endothelium, Vascular; Endotoxins; Energy Metabolism; Energy Transfer; Enterobacteriaceae; Enterococcus faecalis; Enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli; Environmental Monitoring; Enzyme Inhibitors; Epidemiologic Factors; Epigenesis, Genetic; Erythrocytes; Escherichia coli; Escherichia coli Infections; Escherichia coli Vaccines; Esophageal Neoplasms; Esophagectomy; Esophagogastric Junction; Esterases; Esterification; Ethanol; Ethiopia; Ethnicity; Eucalyptus; Evidence-Based Practice; Exercise; Exercise Tolerance; Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation; Family; Fatty Acids; Feedback; Female; Ferric Compounds; Fibrin Fibrinogen Degradation Products; Filtration; Fish Diseases; Flavonoids; Flavonols; Fluorodeoxyglucose F18; Follow-Up Studies; Food Microbiology; Food Preservation; Forests; Fossils; Free Radical Scavengers; Freund's Adjuvant; Fruit; Fungi; Gallium; Gender Identity; Gene Expression Regulation; Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic; Gene Expression Regulation, Plant; Gene Knockdown Techniques; Genes, Bacterial; Genes, Plant; Genetic Predisposition to Disease; Genitalia; Genotype; Glomerulonephritis, IGA; Glottis; Glucocorticoids; Glucose; Glucuronides; Glutathione Transferase; Glycogen Synthase Kinase 3 beta; Gram-Negative Bacterial Infections; Gram-Positive Bacterial Infections; Grassland; Guinea Pigs; Half-Life; Head Kidney; Heart Atria; Heart Rate; Heart Septum; HEK293 Cells; Hematopoietic Stem Cells; Hemodynamics; Hep G2 Cells; Hepacivirus; Hepatitis C; Hepatitis C, Chronic; Hepatocytes; Hesperidin; High-Frequency Ventilation; High-Temperature Requirement A Serine Peptidase 1; Hippocampus; Hirudins; History, 20th Century; History, 21st Century; HIV Infections; Homeostasis; Hominidae; Housing, Animal; Humans; Hydrocarbons, Brominated; Hydrogen Bonding; Hydrogen Peroxide; Hydrogen-Ion Concentration; Hydroxybutyrates; Hydroxyl Radical; Hypertension; Hypothyroidism; Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted; Immunoconjugates; Immunogenic Cell Death; Indoles; Infant, Newborn; Infant, Premature; Infarction, Middle Cerebral Artery; Inflammation; Inflammation Mediators; Infrared Rays; Inhibitory Concentration 50; Injections, Intravenous; Interferon-gamma; Interleukin-23; Interleukin-4; Interleukin-6; Intermediate Filaments; Intermittent Claudication; Intestine, Small; Iridoid Glucosides; Iridoids; Iron; Isomerism; Isotope Labeling; Isoxazoles; Itraconazole; Kelch-Like ECH-Associated Protein 1; Ketoprofen; Kidney Failure, Chronic; Kinetics; Klebsiella pneumoniae; Lactams, Macrocyclic; Lactobacillus; Lactulose; Lakes; Lamivudine; Laparoscopy; Laparotomy; Laryngoscopy; Leucine; Limit of Detection; Linear Models; Lipid A; Lipopolysaccharides; Listeria monocytogenes; Liver; Liver Cirrhosis; Logistic Models; Longitudinal Studies; Losartan; Low Back Pain; Lung; Lupinus; Lupus Erythematosus, Systemic; Machine Learning; Macular Degeneration; Madin Darby Canine Kidney Cells; Magnetic Phenomena; Magnetic Resonance Imaging; Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy; Magnetics; Malaria, Falciparum; Male; Mannans; MAP Kinase Signaling System; Mass Spectrometry; Melatonin; Membrane Glycoproteins; Membrane Proteins; Meniscectomy; Menisci, Tibial; Mephenytoin; Mesenchymal Stem Cells; Metal Nanoparticles; Metal-Organic Frameworks; Methionine; Mice; Mice, Inbred C57BL; Mice, Knockout; Mice, Nude; Mice, Obese; Mice, Transgenic; Microbial Sensitivity Tests; Microcirculation; MicroRNAs; Microscopy, Video; Microtubules; Microvascular Density; Microwaves; Middle Aged; Minimally Invasive Surgical Procedures; Models, Animal; Models, Biological; Models, Molecular; Models, Theoretical; Molecular Docking Simulation; Molecular Structure; Molecular Weight; Morus; Mouth Floor; Multicenter Studies as Topic; Multiple Sclerosis; Multiple Sclerosis, Relapsing-Remitting; Muscle, Skeletal; Myocardial Ischemia; Myocardium; NAD; NADP; Nanocomposites; Nanoparticles; Naphthols; Nasal Lavage Fluid; Nasal Mucosa; Neisseria meningitidis; Neoadjuvant Therapy; Neoplasm Invasiveness; Neoplasm Recurrence, Local; Neoplasms, Experimental; Neural Stem Cells; Neuroblastoma; Neurofilament Proteins; Neurogenesis; Neurons; New York; NF-E2-Related Factor 2; NF-kappa B; Nicotine; Nitriles; Nitrogen; Nitrogen Fixation; North America; Observer Variation; Occupational Exposure; Ochrobactrum; Oils, Volatile; Olea; Oligosaccharides; Omeprazole; Open Field Test; Optimism; Oregon; Oryzias; Osmolar Concentration; Osteoarthritis; Osteoblasts; Osteogenesis; Ovarian Neoplasms; Ovariectomy; Oxadiazoles; Oxidation-Reduction; Oxidative Stress; Oxygen; Ozone; p38 Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinases; Pakistan; Pandemics; Particle Size; Particulate Matter; Patient-Centered Care; Pelargonium; Peptides; Perception; Peripheral Arterial Disease; Peroxides; Pets; Pharmaceutical Preparations; Pharmacogenetics; Phenobarbital; Phenols; Phenotype; Phosphates; Phosphatidylethanolamines; Phosphines; Phospholipids; Phosphorus; Phosphorylation; Photoacoustic Techniques; Photochemotherapy; Photosensitizing Agents; Phylogeny; Phytoestrogens; Pilot Projects; Plant Components, Aerial; Plant Extracts; Plant Immunity; Plant Leaves; Plant Oils; Plants, Medicinal; Plasmodium berghei; Plasmodium falciparum; Platelet Activation; Platelet Function Tests; Pneumonia, Viral; Poaceae; Pogostemon; Poloxamer; Poly I; Poly(ADP-ribose) Polymerase Inhibitors; Polychlorinated Biphenyls; Polychlorinated Dibenzodioxins; Polycyclic Compounds; Polyethylene Glycols; Polylysine; Polymorphism, Genetic; Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide; Population Dynamics; Portasystemic Shunt, Transjugular Intrahepatic; Positron Emission Tomography Computed Tomography; Postoperative Complications; Postprandial Period; Potassium Cyanide; Predictive Value of Tests; Prefrontal Cortex; Pregnancy; Prepulse Inhibition; Prevalence; Procalcitonin; Prodrugs; Prognosis; Progression-Free Survival; Proline; Proof of Concept Study; Prospective Studies; Protein Binding; Protein Conformation; Protein Domains; Protein Folding; Protein Multimerization; Protein Sorting Signals; Protein Structure, Secondary; Proton Pump Inhibitors; Protozoan Proteins; Psychometrics; Pulse Wave Analysis; Pyridines; Pyrrolidines; Quality of Life; Quantum Dots; Quinoxalines; Quorum Sensing; Radiopharmaceuticals; Rain; Random Allocation; Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Rats, Wistar; RAW 264.7 Cells; Reactive Oxygen Species; Receptor, Angiotensin, Type 1; Receptor, PAR-1; Receptors, CXCR4; Receptors, Estrogen; Receptors, Glucocorticoid; Receptors, Interleukin-1; Receptors, Interleukin-17; Receptors, Notch; Recombinant Fusion Proteins; Recombinant Proteins; Reducing Agents; Reflex, Startle; Regional Blood Flow; Regression Analysis; Reperfusion Injury; Reproducibility of Results; Republic of Korea; Respiratory Tract Diseases; Retrospective Studies; Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors; Rhinitis, Allergic; Risk Assessment; Risk Factors; Rituximab; RNA, Messenger; RNA, Ribosomal, 16S; ROC Curve; Rosmarinic Acid; Running; Ruthenium; Rutin; Sarcolemma; Sarcoma; Sarcopenia; Sarcoplasmic Reticulum; SARS-CoV-2; Scavenger Receptors, Class A; Schools; Seasons; Seeds; Sequence Analysis, DNA; Severity of Illness Index; Sex Factors; Shock, Cardiogenic; Short Chain Dehydrogenase-Reductases; Signal Transduction; Silver; Singlet Oxygen; Sinusitis; Skin; Skin Absorption; Small Molecule Libraries; Smoke; Socioeconomic Factors; Soil; Soil Microbiology; Solid Phase Extraction; Solubility; Solvents; Spain; Spectrometry, Mass, Electrospray Ionization; Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared; Speech; Speech Perception; Spindle Poles; Spleen; Sporothrix; Staphylococcal Infections; Staphylococcus aureus; Stereoisomerism; Stomach Neoplasms; Stress, Physiological; Stroke Volume; Structure-Activity Relationship; Substrate Specificity; Sulfonamides; Surface Properties; Surface-Active Agents; Surveys and Questionnaires; Survival Rate; T-Lymphocytes, Cytotoxic; Tandem Mass Spectrometry; Temperature; Tenofovir; Terpenes; Tetracycline; Tetrapleura; Textiles; Thermodynamics; Thiobarbituric Acid Reactive Substances; Thrombin; Thyroid Hormones; Thyroid Neoplasms; Tibial Meniscus Injuries; Time Factors; Tissue Distribution; Titanium; Toluidines; Tomography, X-Ray Computed; Tooth; Tramadol; Transcription Factor AP-1; Transcription, Genetic; Transfection; Transgender Persons; Translations; Treatment Outcome; Triglycerides; Ubiquinone; Ubiquitin-Specific Proteases; United Kingdom; United States; Up-Regulation; Vascular Stiffness; Veins; Ventricular Remodeling; Viral Load; Virulence Factors; Virus Replication; Vitis; Voice; Voice Quality; Wastewater; Water; Water Pollutants, Chemical; Water-Electrolyte Balance; Weather; Wildfires; Wnt Signaling Pathway; Wound Healing; X-Ray Diffraction; Xenograft Model Antitumor Assays; Young Adult; Zoogloea | 2022 |
Brucellosis in the United States, 1960-1972. An abattoir-associated disease. Part I. Clinical features and therapy.
Topics: Abattoirs; Abscess; Agglutination Tests; Animals; Body Weight; Brucella; Brucella abortus; Brucellosis; Cattle; Chloramphenicol; Epididymitis; Fever; Humans; Illinois; Iowa; Lymphatic Diseases; Male; Occupational Diseases; Pyridazines; Splenomegaly; Streptomycin; Sulfanilamides; Tetracycline | 1974 |
Low birthweight and postnatal physical development.
Topics: Adrenocorticotropic Hormone; Adult; Age Factors; Animals; Birth Weight; Body Height; Body Weight; Brain; Child Development; Child, Preschool; Cytomegalovirus Infections; DNA; DNA Replication; Embryonic and Fetal Development; Female; Gestational Age; Growth; Growth Disorders; Growth Hormone; Humans; Hypoxia; Infant; Infant, Newborn; Maternal-Fetal Exchange; Nutrition Disorders; Pregnancy; Rats; RNA; Rubella; Tetracycline | 1969 |
3 trial(s) available for tetracycline and Body-Weight
Article | Year |
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Unprecedented community containment measures were taken following the recent outbreak of COVID-19 in Italy. The aim of the study was to explore the self-reported future compliance of citizens with such measures and its relationship with potentially impactful psychological variables.. An online survey was completed by 931 people (18-76 years) distributed across the Italian territory. In addition to demographics, five dimensions were measured: self-reported compliance with containment measures over time (today, at 7, 14, 30, 60, 90, and 180 days from now) at three hypothetical risk levels (10, 50, 90% of likelihood of contracting the COVID-19), perceived risk, generalized anxiety, intolerance of uncertainty, and relevance of several psychological needs whose satisfaction is currently precluded.. The duration of containment measures plays a crucial role in tackling the spread of the disease as people will be less compliant over time. Psychological needs of citizens impacting on the compliance should be taken into account when planning an easing of the lockdown, along with interventions for protecting vulnerable groups from mental distress.. La apendicitis aguda (AA) es la urgencia quirúrgica abdominal más frecuente. No encontramos estudios específicos que evalúen el impacto de la pandemia causada por el coronavirus 2 (SARS-Cov-2) sobre la AA y su tratamiento quirúrgico. Analizamos la influencia de esta nueva patología sobre la AA.. Estudio observacional retrospectivo en pacientes intervenidos por AA desde enero hasta abril de 2020. Fueron clasificados según el momento de la apendicectomía, antes de la declaración del estado de alarma (Pre-COVID19) y después de la declaración del estado de alarma (Post-COVID19) en España. Se evaluaron variables demográficas, duración de la sintomatología, tipo de apendicitis, tiempo quirúrgico, estancia hospitalaria y complicaciones postoperatorias.. La pandemia por SARS-Cov-2 influye en el momento de diagnóstico de la apendicitis, así como en su grado de evolución y estancia hospitalaria. La peritonitis fue lo más frecuentemente observado. Una sospecha y orientación clínica más temprana, es necesaria para evitar un manejo inadecuado de este trastorno quirúrgico común.. The primary outcome is improvement in PaO. Findings will provide timely information on the safety, efficacy, and optimal dosing of t-PA to treat moderate/severe COVID-19-induced ARDS, which can be rapidly adapted to a phase III trial (NCT04357730; FDA IND 149634).. None.. The gut barrier is crucial in cirrhosis in preventing infection-causing bacteria that normally live in the gut from accessing the liver and other organs via the bloodstream. Herein, we characterised gut inflammation by measuring different markers in stool samples from patients at different stages of cirrhosis and comparing this to healthy people. These markers, when compared with equivalent markers usually measured in blood, were found to be very different in pattern and absolute levels, suggesting that there is significant gut inflammation in cirrhosis related to different immune system pathways to that seen outside of the gut. This provides new insights into gut-specific immune disturbances that predispose to complications of cirrhosis, and emphasises that a better understanding of the gut-liver axis is necessary to develop better targeted therapies.. La surveillance de l’intervalle QT a suscité beaucoup d’intérêt durant la pandémie de la COVID-19 en raison de l’utilisation de médicaments prolongeant l’intervalle QT et les préoccupations quant à la transmission virale par les électrocardiogrammes (ECG) en série. Nous avons posé l’hypothèse que la surveillance en continu de l’intervalle QT par télémétrie était associée à une meilleure détection des épisodes de prolongation de l’intervalle QT.. Nous avons introduit la télémétrie cardiaque en continu (TCC) à l’aide d’un algorithme de surveillance automatisée de l’intervalle QT dans nos unités de COVID-19. Les mesures automatisées quotidiennes de l’intervalle QT corrigé (auto-QTc) en fonction de la fréquence cardiaque maximale ont été enregistrées. Nous avons comparé la proportion des épisodes de prolongation marquée de l’intervalle QTc (QTc long), définie par un intervalle QTc ≥ 500 ms, chez les patients montrant une suspicion de COVID-19 ou ayant la COVID-19 qui avaient été admis avant et après la mise en place de la TCC (groupe témoin. La surveillance en continu de l’intervalle QT est supérieure à la norme de soins dans la détection des épisodes de QTc long et exige peu d’ECG. La réponse clinique aux épisodes de QTc long est sous-optimale.. Exposure to a model wildfire air pollution source modifies cardiovascular responses to HC challenge, suggesting air pollution sensitizes the body to systemic triggers.. Though the majority of HIV-infected adults who were on HAART had shown viral suppression, the rate of suppression was sub-optimal according to the UNAIDS 90-90-90 target to help end the AIDS pandemic by 2020. Nonetheless, the rate of immunological recovery in the study cohort was low. Hence, early initiation of HAART should be strengthened to achieve good virological suppression and immunological recovery.. Dust in Egyptian laying hen houses contains high concentrations of microorganisms and endotoxins, which might impair the health of birds and farmers when inhaled. Furthermore, laying hens in Egypt seem to be a reservoir for ESBL-producing Enterobacteriaceae. Thus, farmers are at risk of exposure to ESBL-producing bacteria, and colonized hens might transmit these bacteria into the food chain.. The lack of significant differences in the absolute changes and relative ratios of injury and repair biomarkers by contrast-associated AKI status suggests that the majority of mild contrast-associated AKI cases may be driven by hemodynamic changes at the kidney.. Most comparisons for different outcomes are based on very few studies, mostly low-powered, with an overall low CoE. Thus, the available evidence is considered insufficient to either support or refute CH effectiveness or to recommend one ICM over another. Therefore, further well-designed, larger RCTs are required.. PROSPERO database Identifier: CRD42016041953.. Untouched root canal at cross-section perimeter, the Hero 642 system showed 41.44% ± 5.62% and Reciproc R40 58.67% ± 12.39% without contact with instruments. Regarding the untouched area, Hero 642 system showed 22.78% ± 6.42% and Reciproc R40 34.35% ± 8.52%. Neither instrument achieved complete cross-sectional root canal debridement. Hero 642 system rotary taper 0.02 instruments achieved significant greater wall contact perimeter and area compared to reciprocate the Reciproc R40 taper 0.06 instrument.. Hero 642 achieved higher wall contact perimeter and area but, regardless of instrument size and taper, vital pulp during. The functional properties of the main mechanisms involved in the control of muscle Ca. This study showed that the anti-inflammatory effect of the iron-responsive product DHA in arthritis can be monitored by an iron-like radioactive tracer (. Attenuated vascular reactivity during pregnancy suggests that the systemic vasodilatory state partially depletes nitric oxide bioavailability. Preliminary data support the potential for MRI to identify vascular dysfunction in vivo that underlies PE. Level of Evidence 2 Technical Efficacy Stage 1 J. MAGN. RESON. IMAGING 2021;53:447-455.. La evaluación de riesgo es importante para predecir los resultados postoperatorios en pacientes con cáncer gastroesofágico. Este estudio de cohortes tuvo como objetivo evaluar los cambios en la composición corporal durante la quimioterapia neoadyuvante e investigar su asociación con complicaciones postoperatorias. MÉTODOS: Los pacientes consecutivos con cáncer gastroesofágico sometidos a quimioterapia neoadyuvante y cirugía con intención curativa entre 2016 y 2019, identificados a partir de una base de datos específica, se incluyeron en el estudio. Se utilizaron las imágenes de tomografía computarizada, antes y después de la quimioterapia neoadyuvante, para evaluar el índice de masa muscular esquelética, la sarcopenia y el índice de grasa visceral y subcutánea.. In this in vitro premature infant lung model, HF oscillation of BCPAP was associated with improved CO. Our results showed that HPC significantly promotes neurogenesis after MCAO and ameliorates neuronal injury.. Inflammatory markers are highly related to signs of systemic hypoperfusion in CS. Moreover, high PCT and IL-6 levels are associated with poor prognosis.. These findings indicate that Tetrapleura tetraptera fruit has a protective potential against stroke through modulation of redox and electrolyte imbalances, and attenuation of neurotransmitter dysregulation and other neurochemical dysfunctions. Tetrapleura tetraptera fruit could be a promising source for the discovery of bioactives for stroke therapy. 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Pyridines; Pyrrolidines; Quality of Life; Quantum Dots; Quinoxalines; Quorum Sensing; Radiopharmaceuticals; Rain; Random Allocation; Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Rats, Wistar; RAW 264.7 Cells; Reactive Oxygen Species; Receptor, Angiotensin, Type 1; Receptor, PAR-1; Receptors, CXCR4; Receptors, Estrogen; Receptors, Glucocorticoid; Receptors, Interleukin-1; Receptors, Interleukin-17; Receptors, Notch; Recombinant Fusion Proteins; Recombinant Proteins; Reducing Agents; Reflex, Startle; Regional Blood Flow; Regression Analysis; Reperfusion Injury; Reproducibility of Results; Republic of Korea; Respiratory Tract Diseases; Retrospective Studies; Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors; Rhinitis, Allergic; Risk Assessment; Risk Factors; Rituximab; RNA, Messenger; RNA, Ribosomal, 16S; ROC Curve; Rosmarinic Acid; Running; Ruthenium; Rutin; Sarcolemma; Sarcoma; Sarcopenia; Sarcoplasmic Reticulum; SARS-CoV-2; Scavenger Receptors, Class A; Schools; Seasons; Seeds; Sequence Analysis, DNA; Severity of Illness Index; Sex Factors; Shock, Cardiogenic; Short Chain Dehydrogenase-Reductases; Signal Transduction; Silver; Singlet Oxygen; Sinusitis; Skin; Skin Absorption; Small Molecule Libraries; Smoke; Socioeconomic Factors; Soil; Soil Microbiology; Solid Phase Extraction; Solubility; Solvents; Spain; Spectrometry, Mass, Electrospray Ionization; Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared; Speech; Speech Perception; Spindle Poles; Spleen; Sporothrix; Staphylococcal Infections; Staphylococcus aureus; Stereoisomerism; Stomach Neoplasms; Stress, Physiological; Stroke Volume; Structure-Activity Relationship; Substrate Specificity; Sulfonamides; Surface Properties; Surface-Active Agents; Surveys and Questionnaires; Survival Rate; T-Lymphocytes, Cytotoxic; Tandem Mass Spectrometry; Temperature; Tenofovir; Terpenes; Tetracycline; Tetrapleura; Textiles; Thermodynamics; Thiobarbituric Acid Reactive Substances; Thrombin; Thyroid Hormones; Thyroid Neoplasms; Tibial Meniscus Injuries; Time Factors; Tissue Distribution; Titanium; Toluidines; Tomography, X-Ray Computed; Tooth; Tramadol; Transcription Factor AP-1; Transcription, Genetic; Transfection; Transgender Persons; Translations; Treatment Outcome; Triglycerides; Ubiquinone; Ubiquitin-Specific Proteases; United Kingdom; United States; Up-Regulation; Vascular Stiffness; Veins; Ventricular Remodeling; Viral Load; Virulence Factors; Virus Replication; Vitis; Voice; Voice Quality; Wastewater; Water; Water Pollutants, Chemical; Water-Electrolyte Balance; Weather; Wildfires; Wnt Signaling Pathway; Wound Healing; X-Ray Diffraction; Xenograft Model Antitumor Assays; Young Adult; Zoogloea | 2022 |
Nutritional status: a determinant of severity of diarrhea in patients with cholera.
The severity of diarrhea and nutritional status were measured in a prospective study of 97 patients hospitalized with cholera in Dacca, Bangladesh. Ninety-five percent of both adults and children were below their respective medians in weight as related to height; greater than 15% of each group showed second-degree protein-calorie malnutrition. Duration of diarrhea, but no volume of stool per hour, was prolonged by 30%-70% in those adults and children suffering from more severe malnutrition. The increased stool loss was unrelated to antibiotic usage, to presence of intestinal parasites, or to the refeeding diet given. It is suggested that the prolongation of diarrhea represents the continued effect of cholera toxin that is irreversibly bound to intestinal mucosal cells, the replacement of which would be retarded under conditions of poor nutrition.. This study investigates the severity of cholera as related to status of protein-calorie nutrition in both tetracycline-treated and non-antibiotic-treated male patients (n=97) at the Cholera Research Hospital in Dacca, Bangladesh during the cholera epidemic of October through December 1974. Stool and urine samples were analyzed. 54 of the patients were severely dehydrated (plasma specific gravity, 1.034) and 43 were moderately dehydrated (plasma specific gravity, 1.030-1.034). Results show that 95% of both adults and children patients were below their median in weight as related to height and that more than 15% of each group showed 2nd degree protein-calorie malnutrition. Prolongation of diarrhea was marked in all patients. 30 to 70% increase in duration of diarrhea was seen in patients with severe malnutrition. Increased stool loss was not associated with antibiotic usage, presence of intestinal parasites, or to refeeding diet given. The findings show that malnutrition enhances risk of infection and particularly of diarrheal illness, which in turn produces more profound malnutrition. Increased stool losses and prolonged diarrhea in malnourished patients may result in large increases in fluid, electrolyte and nursing needs. Topics: Bangladesh; Body Height; Body Weight; Child; Child, Preschool; Cholera; Diarrhea; Humans; Infant; Intestinal Mucosa; Male; Protein-Energy Malnutrition; Tetracycline; Toxins, Biological; Vibrio cholerae | 1976 |
[The effect of antibiotic supplementation on antibiotic resistance, transferable antibiotic resistance, morbidity, and growth in calves (author's transl)].
112 calves, divided into four groups, were given milk substitutes containing tetracycline (high-dosage feed), zinc bacitracin or Lactosat (control) and concentratesw with or without zinc bacitracin (Table I). We have investigated the incidence of antibiotic resistance and transferable antibiotic resistance in E. coli strains isolated from the faces of these calves and checked the growth and state of health in the four groups. Growth was also studies in a further ten feeding series comprising a total of 258 calves. Half this number received zinc bacitracin in milk substitute, the other half were fed milk substitute containing Lactosat, instead of antibiotics (Fig. 8). Tetracycline led to a quick increase of antibiotic-resistant straing (Fig. 4--6). This increase is significant in comparison with the other groups. Significant increases of resistance were also noted to ampicillin and chloramphenicol (Fig. 7), althoug these drugs were not used. A significant increase of the transferable resistance was also observed in the group of calves given tetracycline (Fig. 7) and to 65% at about 31/2 months after the end to 38% within 12 days (Fig. 7) and to 65% at about 31/2 months after the end of tetracycline feeding (Fig. 7). A marked increase of en-bloc transfer was also noted after completion of tetracycline feeding (Fig. 2). Up to slaughter, at the age of 6 months, no better growth was obtained with zinc-bacitracin supplement than with milk substitute without antibiotics but containing Lactosat. During the milking period the results varied between the different feeding series. In some series the mean growth in the zinc-bacitracin group was better than, in some no different from, and in other s poorer than that in the Lactosat group (TableII, Fig. 8). The only demonstrable positive effect of tetracycline supplement was a tendency twwards better health during the period of administration of the drug (Table II... Topics: Ampicillin; Animal Feed; Animals; Bacitracin; Body Weight; Cattle; Cattle Diseases; Chloramphenicol; Clinical Trials as Topic; Depression, Chemical; Escherichia coli; Furazolidone; Neomycin; Penicillin Resistance; Stimulation, Chemical; Streptomycin; Sulfonamides; Sweden; Tetracycline; Time Factors | 1975 |
105 other study(ies) available for tetracycline and Body-Weight
Article | Year |
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Sex-dependent obesogenic effect of tetracycline on Drosophila melanogaster deteriorated by dysrhythmia.
Antibiotics have been identified as obesogens contributing to the prevalence of obesity. Moreover, their environmental toxicity shows sex dependence, which might also explain the sex-dependent obesity observed. Yet, the direct evidence for such a connection and the underlying mechanisms remain to be explored. In this study, the effects of tetracycline, which is a representative antibiotic found in both environmental and food samples, on Drosophila melanogaster were studied with consideration of both sex and circadian rhythms (represented by the eclosion rhythm). Results showed that in morning-eclosed adults, tetracycline significantly stimulated the body weight of females (AM females) at 0.1, 1.0, 10.0 and 100.0 µg/L, while tetracycline only stimulated the body weight of males (AM males) at 1.0 µg/L. In the afternoon-eclosed adults, tetracycline significantly stimulated the body weight of females (PM females) at 0.1, 1.0 and 100.0 µg/L, while it showed more significant stimulation in males (PM males) at all concentrations. Notably, the stimulation levels were the greatest in PM males among all the adults. The results showed the clear sex dependence of the obesogenic effects, which was diminished by dysrhythmia. Further biochemical assays and clustering analysis suggested that the sex- and rhythm-dependent obesogenic effects resulted from the bias toward lipogenesis against lipolysis. Moreover, they were closely related to the preference for the energy storage forms of lactate and glucose and also to the presence of excessive insulin, with the involvement of glucolipid metabolism. Such relationships indicated potential bridges between the obesogenic effects of pollutants and other diseases, e.g., cancer and diabetes. Topics: Animals; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Body Weight; Circadian Rhythm; Drosophila melanogaster; Environmental Pollutants; Female; Glucose; Heterocyclic Compounds; Insulins; Lactates; Male; Obesity; Tetracycline | 2023 |
Do combined nanoscale polystyrene and tetracycline impact on the incidence of resistance genes and microbial community disturbance in Enchytraeus crypticus?
It has been proved that nanoplastics can effectively adsorb pollutants and thus influence their behavior and availability. The combined toxic effects of nanoplastic and its adsorbed pollutant on the soil fauna are still not well known. We used high-throughput quantitative PCR to explore the effects of oral nanoscale polystyrene and tetracycline exposure on antibiotic resistance genes in the soil invertebrate Enchytraeus crypticus, and used bacterial 16S rRNA gene amplification sequencing to examine the response of the microbiome of E. crypticus. After 14 days of tetracycline and nanoscale polystyrene exposure, we terminated exposure and monitored the restoration of ARGs and microbiome in the E. crypticus. Results showed that the number of ARGs, especially macrolide-lincosamide-streptogramin B (MLSB), tetracycline ARGs, as well as multidrug ARGs, increased with exposure to nanoscale polystyrene and tetracycline. The abundance of Aminoglycoside and Beta_Lactamase ARGs in E. crypticus also significantly increased. The exposure significantly perturbed the abundance of families Microbacteriaceae, Streptococcaceae, Enterobacteriaceae, Rhodocyclaceae and Sphinomonadaceae. After terminating exposure for 14 days, the diversity and abundance of ARGs were not completely restored, while the microbiome was not permanently changed but reversibly impacted. Topics: Animals; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Body Weight; Drug Resistance, Bacterial; Gastrointestinal Microbiome; Genes, Bacterial; Nanostructures; Oligochaeta; Polystyrenes; Soil Pollutants; Tetracycline | 2020 |
Effects of tetracycline on myocardial infarct size in obese rats with chemically-induced colitis.
Recent evidence suggests that antibiotic-induced changes in the composition of intestinal microflora, as well as the systemic immunoendocrine effects that result from them, can modulate myocardial tolerance to ischemia-reperfusion injury. The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of tetracycline (TTC) on myocardial infarct size in the isolated hearts obtained from obese rats with chemically-induced colitis (CIC). The association between TTC-induced changes in infarct size and intestinal microbiome composition as well as plasma levels of cytokines and short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) was also studied.. Obesity was induced in Wistar rats by feeding them a high-fat, high-carbohydrate diet for five weeks. A single rectal administration of 3% acetic acid (2 mL) to the rats resulted in CIC. Healthy rats as well as obese rats with CIC received TTC (15 mg daily for 3 days) via gavage. The rats were euthanized, after which isolated heart perfusion with simulated global ischemia and reperfusion was performed. Infarct size was determined histochemically. Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and cytokine levels in plasma were measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, whereas SCFA levels in plasma were measured by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry. The intestinal microbiome was analyzed using reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction.. The treatment with TTC resulted in significant infarct size limitation (50 ± 7 vs. 62 ± 4% for the control mice, p < 0.05) in the hearts from intact animals. However, infarct size was not different between the control rats and the obese rats with CIC. Furthermore, infarct size was significantly larger in TTC-treated obese rats with CIC than it was in the control animals (77 ± 5%, p < 0.05). The concentrations of proinflammatory cytokines and LPS in serum were elevated in the obese rats with CIC. Compared to the control rats, the rats with both obesity and CIC had lower counts of Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium spp. but higher counts of Escherichia coli. The effects of TTC on infarct size were not associated with specific changes in SCFA levels.. TTC reduced infarct size in the healthy rats. However, this effect was reversed in the obese animals with CIC. Additionally, it was associated with specific changes in gut microbiota and significantly elevated levels of cytokines and LPS. Topics: Animals; Biomarkers; Body Weight; Colitis; Disease Models, Animal; Fatty Acids, Volatile; Gastrointestinal Microbiome; Heart Function Tests; Male; Myocardial Infarction; Obesity; Rats; Tetracycline | 2019 |
Senecio
The current study focused on the pro-fertility potential of. A total of 36 male and 36 female adult SD rats were used for this investigation. The male rats randomly assigned to Group A (controls) were given normal saline 2ml/kg. Rats in Groups B, C, D, E, and F were respectively administered [30 mg/kg of body weight (bwt) of tetracycline], [30 mg/kg bwt of tetracycline + 50 mg/kg of vitamin C], [30 mg/kg bwt of tetracycline + 500 mg/kg bwt of Sb], [30 mg/kg bwt of tetracycline + 50 mg/kg of vitamin C + 500 mg/kg bwt of Sb], and [30 mg/kg bwt of tetracycline reversal] daily for 28 days via gastric gavage. Tested parameters included sperm parameters, hormonal profile, histology, and fertility test.. Significant ( Topics: Animals; Body Weight; Female; Follicle Stimulating Hormone; Infertility, Male; Luteinizing Hormone; Male; Plant Extracts; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Semen Analysis; Senecio; Sperm Count; Sperm Motility; Testis; Testosterone; Tetracycline | 2018 |
Treatment with high-dose antidepressants severely exacerbates the pathological outcome of experimental Escherichia coli infections in poultry.
There is an urgent need for novel antibiotics as the current antibiotics are losing their value due to increased resistance among clinically important bacteria. Sertraline, an on-marked anti-depressive drug, has been shown to modify bacterial activity in vitro, including increasing the susceptibility of Escherichia coli to antibiotics. The aim of the present study was to investigate if the antimicrobial activity of sertraline could be documented under clinical settings, hereunder if sertraline could potentiate the effect of tetracycline in treatment of an experimentally induced ascending infection in poultry. A total of 40 chickens were divided in four groups of 10 chickens each. All chickens were challenged with 4x103 colony forming units (CFU) of a tetracycline resistant E. coli strain using a surgical infection model, and subsequently treated with either high-dose sertraline, tetracycline, a combination hereof or received no treatment. Seven days post challenge all birds were submitted to necropsy and scored pathologically for lesions. The average lesion scores were significantly higher (P<0.05) in the groups that were treated with high-dose sertraline or high-dose sertraline combined with tetracycline. In conclusion high-dose treatments (four times the maximum therapeutic dose for treating human depression) with sertraline as an adjuvant for treatment of antibiotic resistant E. coli infections exacerbate the pathological outcome of infection in chickens. Topics: Animals; Antidepressive Agents; Body Weight; Chickens; Colony Count, Microbial; Disease Progression; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Drug Synergism; Escherichia coli; Escherichia coli Infections; Fallopian Tubes; Female; Immunohistochemistry; Liver; Poultry Diseases; Sertraline; Tetracycline | 2017 |
Glucocorticoid-induced osteoporosis in growing rats.
This study evaluated whether growing rats were appropriate animal models of glucocorticoid-induced osteoporosis. The 3-month-old male rats were treated with either vehicle or prednisone acetate at 1.5, 3.0, and 6.0 mg/kg/day by oral gavage, respectively. All rats were injected with tetracycline and calcein before sacrificed for the purpose of double in vivo labeling. Biochemistry, histomorphometry, mechanical test, densitometry, micro-CT, histology, and component analysis were performed. We found that prednisone treatments dose dependently decreased body weight, serum biomarkers, biomechanical markers, bone formation, and bone resorption parameters in both tibial and femoral trabecular bone without trabecular bone loss. We also found that significant bone loss happened in femoral cortical bone in the glucocorticoid-treated rats. The results suggested that prednisone not only inhibited bone formation, but also inhibited bone resorption which resulted in poor bone strength but with no cancellous bone loss in growing rats. These data also suggested that the effects of glucocorticoid on bone metabolism were different between cortical bone and trabecular bone, and different between tibia and femur. Growing rats may be a glucocorticoid-induced osteoporosis animal model when evaluated the effects of drugs upon juvenile patients exposed to GC for a long time. Topics: Acetates; Animals; Biomarkers; Biomechanical Phenomena; Body Weight; Bone Resorption; Densitometry; Disease Models, Animal; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Fluoresceins; Glucocorticoids; Male; Osteoporosis; Prednisone; Principal Component Analysis; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Stress, Mechanical; Tetracycline; Time Factors; X-Ray Microtomography | 2014 |
Adverse effect of tetracycline and doxycycline on testicular tissue and sperm parameters in CD1 outbred mice.
Tetracycline and doxycycline are commonly used antibiotics in acne treatment during puberty in humans. The long-term effect of these antibiotics on male reproductive tract development has not been fully elucidated. For this reason we tested the effect of antibiotics on the reproductive parameters of mice males during puberty with the therapeutic dose used in humans, and with lower and higher doses. The outbred mouse strain CD1 with higher heterozygosity was exposed for 14 days at puberty. Adult males at the age of 70 days were used for the measurements. We observed a significant decrease in anogenital distance and thickness of the seminiferous epithelium in the treated animals. Pathological changes in the testes had an impact on sperm quality; a higher number of sperm positively stained with Annexin V and TUNEL and a lower number of acrosome-intact sperm was detected. In conclusion, the treatment of male mice with antibiotics in puberty led to long-lasting effects on reproductive organs and spermatozoa in adult males. Topics: Aging; Animals; Animals, Outbred Strains; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Apoptosis; Body Weight; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Doxycycline; Flow Cytometry; Male; Mice; Organ Size; Spermatozoa; Testis; Tetracycline | 2013 |
Tight Long-term dynamic doxycycline responsive nigrostriatal GDNF using a single rAAV vector.
Glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) gene transfer is being developed as a treatment for Parkinson's disease (PD). Due to the potential for side effects, external transgene regulation should enhance this strategy's safety profile. Here, we demonstrate dynamic control during long-term expression of GDNF using a recombinant adeno-associated virus (rAAV)-based bicistronic tetracycline (tet)-off construct. Nigrostriatal GDNF overexpression induces body weight alterations in rodents, enabling longitudinal in vivo tracking of GDNF expression after nigral vector delivery. Regulated GDNF expression was highly sensitive to dietary doxycycline (DOX), displaying undetectable striatal GDNF levels at serum DOX levels below those required for antimicrobial activity. However, in the absence of DOX, striatal GDNF levels exceeded levels required for efficacy in PD models. We also demonstrate the absence of a series of known GDNF-associated side effects when using direct intrastriatal vector delivery. Therefore, this single rAAV vector system meets most of the requirements for an experimental reagent for treatment of PD. Topics: Animals; Body Weight; Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid; Densitometry; Dependovirus; Doxycycline; Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay; Gene Expression Regulation; Genetic Vectors; Glial Cell Line-Derived Neurotrophic Factor; Immunohistochemistry; Male; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Tetracycline | 2009 |
Increased longitudinal growth in rats on a silicon-depleted diet.
Silicon-deficiency studies in growing animals in the early 1970s reported stunted growth and profound defects in bone and other connective tissues. However, more recent attempts to replicate these findings have found mild alterations in bone metabolism without any adverse health effects. Thus the biological role of silicon remains unknown. Using a specifically formulated silicon-depleted diet and modern methods for silicon analysis and assessment of skeletal development, we undertook, through international collaboration between silicon researchers, an extensive study of long-term silicon depletion on skeletal development in an animal. 21-day old female Sprague-Dawley rats (n=20) were fed a silicon-depleted diet (3.2 microg Si/g feed) for 26 weeks and their growth and skeletal development were compared with identical rats (n=10) on the same diet but with silicon added as Si(OH)(4) to their drinking water (53.2 microg Si/g water); total silicon intakes were 24 times different. A third group of rats, receiving a standard rodent stock feed (322 microg Si/g feed) and tap water (5 microg Si/g water), served as a reference group for optimal growth. A series of anthropometric and bone quality measures were undertaken during and following the study. Fasting serum silicon concentrations and especially urinary silicon excretion were significantly lower in the silicon-deprived group compared to the supplemented group (P=0.03 and 0.004, respectively). Tibia and soft-tissue silicon contents did not differ between the two groups, but tibia silicon levels were significantly lower compared to the reference group (P<0.0001). Outward adverse health effects were not observed in the silicon-deprived group. However, body lengths from week 18 onwards (P<0.05) and bone lengths at necropsy (P=0.002) were longer in this group. Moreover, these measures correlated inversely with serum silicon concentrations (P=0.02). A reduction in bone growth plate thickness and an apparent increase in chondrocyte density were also observed in the silicon-deprived animals. No other differences were observed between the two groups, except for tibia phosphorus concentrations, which were lower in the silicon-deprived animals (P=0.0003). Thus in this study we were unable to reproduce the profound deficiency state reported in rats and chicks in the early 1970s. Indeed, although silicon intake and circulating fasting serum levels differed between the silicon-deprived and silicon-supplemented animals, Topics: Animal Feed; Animals; Body Weight; Bone and Bones; Bone Density; Bone Development; Bone Remodeling; Chondrocytes; Female; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Silicon; Tetracycline; Tibia; Tomography, X-Ray Computed | 2008 |
Expression of the reverse tetracycline-transactivator gene causes emphysema-like changes in mice.
The doxycycline-inducible, gene regulatory system allows tight control of transgene expression for the study of organ development and disease pathogenesis. Multiple recent reports have employed this model to investigate various lung diseases including emphysema. For our study, we used this transgenic system to test whether prolonged, lung-specific, overexpression of the serine protease urokinase plasminogen activator (uPA) would result in alveolar wall destruction. Double transgenic mice were generated that possessed: (1) the rat Clara cell secretory protein promoter controlling the reverse tetracycline transactivator gene (CCSP:rtTA) and (2) the tetracycline operator controlling the murine uPA cDNA (tet[O]:muPA). Mice were treated with doxycycline beginning at age 6 wk to initiate uPA overexpression. Single transgenic and wild-type animals served as controls. A second group of double transgenic and control animals were maintained off of doxycycline. At ages 10, 18, and 30 wk, the mice underwent measurements of alveolar size, lung compliance, and total lung capacity. We found that, although the uPA overexpressing mice demonstrated an emphysema phenotype, similar abnormalities occurred in the CCSP-rtTA control animals. These CCSP-rtTA-related alterations occurred even without doxycycline exposure. Evaluation of a second transgenic line possessing the human surfactant protein C promoter controlling rtTA expression also exhibited lung abnormalities consistent with emphysema. These findings indicate that pulmonary epithelial expression of rtTA alone causes an emphysema phenotype in mice. Therefore, when using this system to study emphysema pathogenesis, the inclusion of proper controls is essential for accurate data interpretation. Topics: Animals; Body Weight; Doxycycline; Emphysema; Gene Expression; Genotype; Kinetics; Lung Compliance; Mice; Mice, Inbred C57BL; Mice, Transgenic; Promoter Regions, Genetic; Pulmonary Alveoli; Pulmonary Surfactant-Associated Protein C; Tetracycline; Total Lung Capacity; Trans-Activators; Urokinase-Type Plasminogen Activator; Uteroglobin | 2006 |
Cardiac transgenesis with the tetracycline transactivator changes myocardial function and gene expression.
The cardiac-specific tetracycline-regulated gene expression system (tet-system) is a powerful tool using double-transgenic mice. The cardiac alpha-myosin heavy chain promoter (alphaMHC) drives lifetime expression of a tetracycline-inhibited transcription activator (tTA). Crossing alphaMHC-tTA mice with mice containing a tTA-responsive promoter linked to a target gene yields double-transgenic mice having tetracycline-repressed expression of the target gene in the heart. Using the tet-system, some studies use nontransgenic mice for the control group, whereas others use single-transgenic alphaMHC-tTA mice. However, previous studies found that high-level expression of a modified activator protein caused cardiomyopathy. Therefore, we tested whether cardiac expression of tTA was associated with altered function of alphaMHC-tTA mice compared with wild-type (WT) littermates. We monitored in vivo and in vitro function and gene expression profiles for myocardium from WT and alphaMHC-tTA mice. Compared with WT littermates, alphaMHC-tTA mice had a greater heart-to-body weight ratio (approximately 10%), ventricular dilation, and decreased ejection fraction, suggesting mild cardiomyopathy. In vitro, submaximal contractions were greater compared with WT and were associated with greater myofilament Ca2+ sensitivity. Gene expression profiling revealed that the expression of 153 genes was significantly changed by >20% when comparing alphaMHC-tTA with WT myocardium. These findings demonstrate that introduction of the alphaMHC-tTA construct causes significant effects on myocardial gene expression and major functional abnormalities in vivo and in vitro. For studies using the tet-system, these results suggest caution in the use of controls, since alphaMHC-tTA myocardium differs appreciably from WT. Furthermore, the results raise the possibility that the phenotype conferred by a target gene may be influenced by the modified genetic background of alphaMHC-tTA myocardium. Topics: Actin Cytoskeleton; Animals; Body Weight; Calcium; Cytosol; Doxycycline; Gene Expression Profiling; Gene Expression Regulation; Genotype; Heart; Mice; Mice, Transgenic; Myocardium; Organ Size; Phenotype; Tetracycline; Trans-Activators; Ventricular Myosins | 2005 |
Factors related to recurrence of spontaneous pneumothorax.
The purpose of this retrospective study was to identify factors associated with recurrent spontaneous pneumothorax (SP) in southern China, and to compare the therapeutic effectiveness of different procedures.. A total of 182 consecutive patients (89.0% male; mean age, 38.9 years), admitted with their first episode of pneumothorax, were reviewed retrospectively. Follow up was available in 138 patients (75.8%), including 68 treated by chemical pleurodesis and 70 by chest tube drainage alone. The cumulative recurrence rates with different therapeutic procedures and different chemical sclerosing agents were compared, and the factors that influenced the recurrence rate were analysed using Cox's proportional hazard model.. The most common pre-existing lung disease responsible for pneumothorax was COPD (69.7%), followed by tuberculosis (16.5%). Recurrence was significantly more common in taller patients, patients with lower weight, and patients with secondary spontaneous pneumothorax. The cumulative recurrence rates in the pleurodesis therapy group after 6 months, 1 and 3 years were 13, 16 and 27%, respectively, whereas in the chest tube drainage group the recurrence rates were 26, 33 and 50%, respectively (P < 0.05). There was no significant difference in the recurrence rate for those receiving tetracycline compared with those who received gentamicin.. Spontaneous pneumothorax patients who are taller, weigh less or have secondary spontaneous pneumothorax are more likely to have recurrences. The risk of recurrence is reduced in patients who undergo chemical pleurodesis. Since there was no significant difference between intrapleural tetracycline and gentamicin, gentamicin should be considered as a potential chemical sclerosing agent. Topics: Adult; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Body Height; Body Weight; China; Drainage; Female; Follow-Up Studies; Gentamicins; Humans; Incidence; Male; Pleurodesis; Pneumothorax; Proportional Hazards Models; Retrospective Studies; Risk Factors; Secondary Prevention; Tetracycline; Treatment Outcome | 2005 |
Reproductive strategies of Tribolium flour beetles.
Although, beetles of the genus Tribolium first evolved as saprophylic insects, they have adapted to the stored products environment for several thousand years. In this study reproductive strategies are described for eight species of Tribolium that are known to occur in this environment. Experiments were conducted under the same conditions for every species, and several life history traits, including egg mass, adult mass, developmental time and fecundity were examined and compared among these species. Common reproductive strategies were not found among the different species and univariate analysis highlighted strong differences between the species for most of the traits investigated. Some species showed reproductive traits that are likely to give a fitness advantage in the environment of stored products. Multivariate statistical analysis allowed the detection of different sub-groups with respect to their reproductive strategy. Adult mass and egg-to-adult developmental time discriminated between groups. Intraspecific allometric relationships were further investigated but only a few correlations appeared to be significant. Topics: Animals; Body Weight; Diptera; Female; Life Cycle Stages; Male; Reproduction; Species Specificity; Tetracycline; Tribolium | 2005 |
Effect of calcium supplementation on bone dynamics of the maxilla, mandible and proximal tibia in experimental osteoporosis.
The effect of calcium supplementation on the bone dynamics in the hard palate of the molar region (maxilla), mandible and proximal tibia in experimental osteoporotic rats was examined. Ninety ovariectomized (OVX) and 45 sham-OVX Wistar female rats were used in this study. All the rats received surgical operation at 6 weeks of age. Ovariectomized rats were fed on a low calcium diet (0.02%) for 12 weeks post-operation, and then randomly divided into the two following groups. One group was fed on high calcium diet (2.30%) (OVX-HCa) and the other group was remained on the low calcium diet (OVX-LCa). Sham-OVX rats were fed on regular calcium diet (1.15%) during the experimental period (Sham-OVX). Histomorphological analysis was carried out from 12 to 32 weeks post-operation. On undecalcified thin section, bone volume, eroded surface, osteoid surface and bone formation rate were calculated for cortical bone of the maxilla, and for cancellous bone of the mandible and proximal tibia. In the OVX-LCa group, compared with the Sham-OVX group, decrease of the bone volume and increase of the bone resorption and formation parameters were detected throughout the observation periods. In the OVX-HCa group, compared with the OVX-LCa group, increase of the bone volume and temporarily increased parameters of bone formation at 1 week after feeding on high calcium diet were observed in the maxilla, but these changes were not observed in the mandible and proximal tibia. Moreover, the bone resorption and formation parameters in the maxilla, mandible and proximal tibia in the OVX-HCa group became equivalent to the Sham-OVX levels with the passage of time. Topics: Analysis of Variance; Animals; Body Weight; Bone Matrix; Bone Resorption; Calcium, Dietary; Dietary Supplements; Disease Models, Animal; Female; Fluoresceins; Fluorescent Dyes; Image Processing, Computer-Assisted; Mandible; Maxilla; Osteogenesis; Osteoporosis; Ovariectomy; Palate, Hard; Random Allocation; Rats; Rats, Wistar; Statistics as Topic; Tetracycline; Tibia | 2002 |
Effects of orchidectomy on bone metabolism in beagle dogs.
The effects of orchidectomy on bone metabolism in male beagle dogs were examined using twelve 2-year-old dogs that were orchidectomized. The dogs' bilateral iliac bones, double-labeled with tetracycline and calcein for the histomorphometry, were obtained from three dogs prior to orchidectomy and at 3, 6, 9, and 12 months afterwards. The serum biochemical constituents related to bone metabolism were examined before and every month after orchidectomy. Between 1 and 6 months after orchidectomy, the value of serum testosterone decreased (1 month), while the levels of parathyroid hormone, calcitonin, total calcium, osteocalcin, and alkaline phosphatase activity increased significantly, indicating a high bone turnover. The mean trabecular thickness and the fraction of labeled osteoid surface decreased significantly 3 months after orchidectomy, but other histomorphometric parameters were unchanged. In the period 7-12 months after orchidectomy, the parathyroid hormone level increased ever and above that of the first 6-month period, while the levels of calcitonin, osteocalcin, alkaline phosphatase activity, and phosphorus decreased. The bone volume, mean trabecular thickness, and the fraction of labeled trabecular surface decreased significantly compared with the pre-orchidectomy values. These findings indicate an imbalance in bone metabolism (i.e. bone resorption > bone formation). These results indicate that a loss of bone volume accompanied the fall in sex hormone levels following orchidectomy and suggest that the orchidectomized dog is available as an animal model for studying osteoporosis caused by hypogonadism and the decline of sex functions in men. Topics: Alkaline Phosphatase; Animals; Biopsy; Body Weight; Bone and Bones; Bone Remodeling; Calcitonin; Calcium; Disease Models, Animal; Dogs; Fluoresceins; Fluorescent Dyes; Ilium; Image Processing, Computer-Assisted; Male; Microscopy, Fluorescence; Orchiectomy; Osteocalcin; Parathyroid Hormone; Phosphorus; Protein Synthesis Inhibitors; Testosterone; Tetracycline | 2000 |
Effect of calcium stress on the skeleton mass of intact and ovariectomized rats.
Female rats were ovariectomized (Ovx) or sham-operated (control) at 18 weeks and the entire skeleton obtained at 24 weeks (baseline) or after an additional 31 day (28 week) interval on a normal (1.0%) or deficient (0.02%) calcium diet. Ovx rats showed a 42% increase in whole body bone resorption (3H-tetracycline loss) in the absence of calcium stress (1.0% calcium diet) and a 70% increase in resorption with morphological evidence of dramatic loss of cancellous bone mass when placed on calcium-deficient (0.02%) diets. Ovx rats kept on the 1.0% calcium diet showed a significant increase in both their body weight (30.2%) and total bone mass (11.6%) compared to baseline sham-operated controls. However, the total skeleton mass of these animals was significantly reduced (-20%) from that predicted by calculations based on body weight. Maintaining animals on calcium-deficient diets had no significant effect on the total skeleton mass of either control or Ovx rats in comparison with age-matched controls on 1.0% diets. It was further determined that an increase in bone mass between 24 and 28 weeks in rats receiving 1.0% dietary calcium occurred in both the axial and appendicular skeleton and was proportionately similar between control and Ovx groups. However, in animals subjected to dietary calcium stress during this interval, the decreased skeletal growth noted was confined primarily to the axial skeleton. The data indicate that ovariectomy or ovariectomy plus calcium stress does not result in loss of total bone mass during the interval of dramatically increased resorption and rapid loss of cancellous bone. The results suggest that the deterioration in individual bone structural and mechanical integrity due to ovariectomy or dietary calcium deficiency may not be attributed to overt loss in total bone mass but may involve a redistribution of bone mass. Topics: Animals; Body Weight; Bone and Bones; Bone Density; Bone Development; Bone Resorption; Calcium; Calcium, Dietary; Female; Femur Head; Femur Neck; Linear Models; Osteoporosis; Ovariectomy; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Tetracycline | 2000 |
Histomorphometric assessment of bone changes in rats with type II collagen-induced arthritis.
Numerous studies have demonstrated bone loss in rats following immobilization by tenotomy or nerve sectioning and following ovariectomy. However, few experiments have focused on bone change in rats with arthritis. We investigated bone loss in the proximal tibia and lumbar vertebra in rats with type II collagen-induced arthritis, an experimental model of rheumatoid arthritis, using histomorphometry. Bone loss in the early phase after immunization reflected a significant increase in numbers of osteoclasts and temporarily decreased bone formation. In the proximal tibia, near an arthritic joint, osteoclast numbers associated with bone trabeculae were increased four times over control numbers 4 weeks after immunization. In the lumbar vertebra, where arthritis was not shown, recruitment of osteoclasts occurred later than in the proximal tibia. With time, in both the proximal tibia and lumbar vertebra bone resorption normalized, but bone formation rate and double-label surface by tetracycline, a parameter reflecting bone formation, were increased above control values. We conclude that differences between the proximal tibia and lumbar vertebra probably reflected resumption of function as well as distance from areas of inflammation. These findings indicate that collagen-induced arthritis in rats is a useful model not only of autoimmunity, but also of juxta-articular and generalized osteoporosis in rheumatoid arthritis. Topics: Animals; Arthritis, Experimental; Biomarkers; Body Weight; Bone Diseases, Metabolic; Bone Resorption; Cell Count; Collagen; Disease Models, Animal; Female; Immobilization; Knee Joint; Lumbar Vertebrae; Osteoclasts; Radiography; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Tetracycline; Tibia | 1999 |
Regional variations in the progression of bone loss in two different mouse osteopenia models.
Differences in trabecular and cortical bone loss have been demonstrated clinically, but differences in bone loss at different skeletal sites remain unclear. We examined regional variations in bone loss histomorphometrically in two strains of mice in which osteopenia progresses spontaneously: tiptoe-walking Yoshimura (twy) mice (from 4 to 37 weeks of age) and senescent ICR mice (from 4 to 88 weeks of age). Morphometrical measurements were obtained to investigate the changes with age in trabecular bone area and anterior cortical bone width in the lumbar vertebral body, trabecular bone area in the tibia, bone area in the parietal bone, and the cortical index in the humerus. Results showed that, in twy mice, trabecular turnover was higher than in ICR mice, and bone loss progressed in the following order: tibial trabecular bone, lumbar trabecular bone, parietal bone, lumbar anterior cortical bone, and the humerus. In ICR mice, bone formation declined after 60 weeks. Bone loss progressed in tibial trabecular bone and the parietal bone at 60 weeks of age, followed by lumbar trabecular bone, lumbar anterior cortical bone, and the humerus at 88 weeks of age. Bone loss varied at each site and between the two mouse strains, with different bone turnover rates. The findings of the present study indicate that special attention should be paid to regional variations in the progression of bone loss associated with differences in pathologic features. Topics: Aging; Animals; Body Weight; Bone Development; Bone Diseases, Metabolic; Disease Progression; Female; Fluoresceins; Humerus; Mice; Mice, Inbred ICR; Mice, Mutant Strains; Osteoporosis; Parietal Bone; Spine; Tetracycline; Tibia | 1998 |
First North American field release of a vaccinia-rabies glycoprotein recombinant virus.
Following nearly 10 yr of extensive laboratory evaluation, a vaccinia-rabies glycoprotein (V-RG) vaccine was the first recombinant virus to undergo limited North American field release on 20 August 1990. The free-ranging raccoon population on Parramore Island (Virginia, USA) was exposed to a high density (10 baits/ha) of vaccine-laden baits distributed on a 300 ha vaccination area. An annual total of 887 raccoons were live-trapped for sedation, physical examination and blood collection for rabies antibody determination; there was no evidence of adverse effects or lesions due to the vaccine. Age and sex distributions, mean body weights, and live-capture histories of raccoons from the vaccination and non-baited control areas were compared. There were no statistically significant differences in survivorship between the baited and non-baited areas, nor between rabies antibody-positive and antibody-negative raccoons from the vaccination area. There was no trend in field mortality that suggested an association with either tetracycline or sulfadimethoxine, used as biomakers, or with vaccine contact determined by antibody status. No gross or histopathologic lesions due to the vaccine were demonstrated among a subsample of live-trapped raccoons collected for gross necropsy, biomarker analysis, histopathologic examination, and V-RG virus isolation attempts. Recovery of V-RG virus was limited to the tonsils of two biomarker-positive, clinically healthy raccoons collected from the vaccination area for postmortem examination on days 2 and 4 following bait distribution. These data reinforce the extensive body of safety data on the V-RG virus and extend it to include field evaluation where vaccine is offered free-choice in abundance, in baits designed to attract free-ranging raccoons, in a relatively simple ecosystem. Topics: Administration, Oral; Animals; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Antibodies, Viral; Biomarkers; Body Weight; Female; Male; Rabies; Rabies Vaccines; Rabies virus; Raccoons; Survival Analysis; Telemetry; Tetracycline; Vaccination; Vaccines, Synthetic; Virginia | 1998 |
A chemically modified tetracycline inhibits streptozotocin-induced diabetic depression of skin collagen synthesis and steady-state type I procollagen mRNA.
Wasting of connective tissues including skin, bone, and cartilage have been closely associated with elevated matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) activity and depressed collagen content in the streptozotocin (STZ)-induced diabetic rat, while tetracyclines have been reported to normalize total body weight, skin hydroxyproline and collagen content in this model, in part through inhibition of MMPs. In the present study, we report the effect of CMT-1, a chemically modified tetracycline that lacks antimicrobial properties but retains divalent cation binding and MMP inhibitory activity, on diabetic skin collagen synthesis and steady-state levels of procollagen alpha 1(I) mRNA. Male, 4-month old Sprague-Dawley rats received a single injection of 75 mg/kg STZ or citrate vehicle alone and diabetic status was confirmed by positive glucosuria. Some diabetic animals received 10 mg/day of CMT-1 by oral gavage and, 28 days after STZ treatment, body weight, blood glucose values and the in vivo rates of skin collagen production were measured using the pool-expansion technique. Steady-state levels of procollagen alpha 1(I) mRNA were analyzed 21 days after STZ treatment by hybridization of total RNA with a 32P labelled cDNA to rat type I procollagen alpha 1(I) mRNA in a dot-blot assay. STZ treatment was found to significantly depress body weight, skin collagen hydroxyproline content, the in vivo rate of collagen production, and hybridizable levels of type I procollagen alpha 1(I) mRNA. CMT-1 administered daily to STZ-treated rats inhibited the diabetic depression of these parameters but had little or no effect on non-diabetic controls or on STZ-induced hyperglycemia. Thus, in addition to the inhibition of MMP mediated extracellular collagen degradation, these results suggest CMT-1 also acts to inhibit diabetic connective tissue breakdown in STZ-induced diabetes by increasing both steady-state levels of type I procollagen mRNA and collagen synthesis through mechanism(s) that are independent of the antibacterial properties of tetracyclines. Topics: Animals; Blood Glucose; Body Weight; Collagen; Diabetes Mellitus, Experimental; Intubation, Gastrointestinal; Male; Procollagen; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; RNA, Messenger; Skin; Tetracycline | 1998 |
Fluoride uptake into the developing enamel and dentine of sheep incisors following daily ingestion of fluoridated milk or water.
Incomplete availability of fluoride from fluoride compounds when added to milk is claimed to reduce the effectiveness of fluoridated milk in caries prevention in humans. This study attempts to add to the understanding of the systemic bioavailability of fluoride ingested with milk compared with water, by measuring its uptake into developing incisors of sheep. Twenty-five sheep, aged approximately 10 months, were randomised into five groups and farmed under identical conditions. They were dosed orally each day for 22 weeks with fluoride as sodium fluoride in water or bovine milk. The doses of fluoride were 0.5 or 0.2 mg/kg body weight in milk or water; a control group received no additional fluoride. Tooth length was labelled at the start of dosing with intramuscular injection of tetracycline. After sacrificing, incisors were removed, sectioned, and analysed for fluoride and calcium by proton microprobe scans from the enamel surface to the pulp. Concentrations of ionised fluoride in the milk samples were 30 percent and 20 percent respectively for added fluoride at concentrations of 300 and 750 micrograms/ml. The mean fluoride concentrations in surface enamel, deep enamel, and dentine were dependent on the daily fluoride dose and independent of the carrier (milk or water). The teeth of sheep receiving the higher fluoride dose (0.5 mg/kg body weight) had significantly higher fluoride than those receiving the lower fluoride dose (0.2 mg/kg body weight), which were significantly higher than in the teeth of the control sheep. It was concluded that the bioavailability of fluoride from sodium fluoride mixed with milk or water was similar following metabolism, despite 20-30 percent and 100 percent ionisation in milk and water respectively. Topics: Animals; Biological Availability; Body Weight; Calcium; Cariostatic Agents; Cattle; Coloring Agents; Dental Enamel; Dentin; Electron Probe Microanalysis; Incisor; Milk; Odontogenesis; Random Allocation; Sheep; Sodium Fluoride; Tetracycline; Water Supply | 1996 |
Growth hormone stimulates bone formation and strength of cortical bone in aged rats.
The influence of growth hormone on bone formation, mechanical strength, and composition has been investigated in femur middiaphyseal cortical bone from 2-year-old male rats. The rats were given biosynthetic human growth hormone (bhGH) at 2.7 mg/kg/day in two daily injections for 20, 40, or 80 days, and all animals were killed 80 days after the start of bhGH administration. Control animals were given saline. All animals were labeled with tetracycline on days 41 and 69. Only in the bhGH-80-day group was subperiosteal tetracycline double labeling seen all around the femur diaphysis, and this pattern was found in all animals of the group. Double labeling subperiosteally at the posteromedial aspect was found in all animals of the experiment, but compared with the control group, a 400% and an 800% increase in mineral apposition rate was seen in the bhGH-40-day and bhGH-80-day groups, respectively. Light microscopy and polarization microscopy showed that this newly deposited bone was organized in the same concentric lammellae and had the same direction of the collagen fibers when compared with the surrounding bone formed before the start of bhGH injections. The cortical bone cross-sectional area was increased in the bhGH-40-day and bhGH-80-day groups. At the endosteum, scattered labeling was found in animals from all groups, and no differences in medullary cross-sectional areas were seen. The mechanical analysis revealed an increased mechanical strength of the whole diaphyseal bone after bhGH administration. When the data were corrected for dimensions of the diaphyseal bone, no differences in intrinsic mechanical properties of the bone tissue were found. No differences in apparent density of dry defatted bone, ash, and collagen were seen, whereas apparent density of dry defatted bone minus ash was decreased in all groups given bhGH. Correspondingly, a slight increase in ash concentrations of the bhGH-injected animals was seen. bhGH administration also increased the body weight, muscle mass, and total serum IGF-I and thyroxine concentrations. Topics: Aging; Animals; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Biomechanical Phenomena; Blood Proteins; Body Weight; Bone Density; Bone Development; Femur; Growth Hormone; Humans; Insulin-Like Growth Factor I; Male; Microscopy, Fluorescence; Microscopy, Polarization; Muscle, Skeletal; Rats; Rats, Wistar; Tetracycline; Thyroxine; Triiodothyronine | 1995 |
A histomorphometric study of bone changes in thyroid dysfunction in rats.
Clinical studies in thyrotoxicosis reveal a state of high bone turnover leading, eventually, to osteoporosis. Recently there has been concern that thyroxine (T4) treatment may have a similar effect on bone. Rat models have been used to study the effects of T4 on bone, but the majority of studies have looked at the effects of T4 after only 3 weeks of treatment. The aim of this study was to evaluate histomorphometric changes in rats after 12 weeks of thyroxine overtreatment or 12 weeks of hypothyroidism compared with untreated control animals. Animals received either T4 200 micrograms/kg per day, 0.1% propylthiouracil, or vehicle for 12 weeks. Tetracycline was administered 1 week and 3 weeks prior to killing. Iliac crest bone was used for histomorphometry. Serum T4 measurements (taken at killing) confirmed hyper- and hypothyroidism in the appropriate animal groups (between group difference p < 0.001 by ANOVA). In hyperthyroid animals there was an increase in mineral apposition rate (MAR; 0.94 vs. 0.59 microns/day, p < 0.001) and mineral formation rate (MFR/BS; 0.24 vs. 0.12 x 10(-2) micron3/micron2 per day, p < 0.001) and a slight increase in eroded surfaces (ES/BS%; 1.54 vs. 1.36, p < 0.05) compared with controls, consistent with previous in vitro and in vivo observations. In hypothyroid rats there was a marked reduction in osteoid surfaces (OS/BS%; 1.7 vs. 24.8, p < 0.001) and MAR (0.3 vs. 0.59 micrograms/day, p < 0.001), a reduction in ES/BS% (0.51 vs. 1.36, p < 0.05), and an increase in cancellous bone volume (BV/TV%; 30.29 vs. 19.6, p < 0.05), suggesting that thyroid hormones are a requirement for normal bone turnover.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) Topics: Analysis of Variance; Animals; Body Weight; Calcinosis; Disease Models, Animal; Drug Overdose; Hyperthyroidism; Hypothyroidism; Ilium; Male; Propylthiouracil; Radioimmunoassay; Rats; Rats, Wistar; Tetracycline; Thyroid Function Tests; Thyroxine | 1995 |
What is the difference of bone growth in SHR and SD rats?
1. Both sexes of spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) and Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats were used in this study. 2. At 6, 12, 18, 24, 30, 36, 42, 48, 54 and 60 weeks old, tibia length (L), volume (V), dry weight (DW), bone mineral density (BMD) in tibia and serum biochemical parameters (Ca2+, Ca, iP, ALP, TRAP) were measured. 3. At the 18 and 48 weeks old, bone morphometry was performed (mineral apposition rate, trabecular bone volume and trabecular thickness). Serum PTH and osteocalcin level were determined in 18 week old rats. 4. The time course change of DW, L and V were almost the same as the trends of bodyweight in each group, namely, male SD had the highest value, female SD and male SHR showed the same value and the lowest figures were obtained in female SHR. 5. BMD of the middle area showed almost the same trends with the time course change of bodyweight. On the other hand, both sexes of SHR had lower BMD than that of SD in the proximal area. 6. Serum biochemical parameters showed the same trends in both sexes of SD and SHR except for ALP (a marker of bone formation) which was higher in male than in female rats. 7. Mineral apposition rate, trabecular bone volume and trabecular thickness were not different between the same sex of SD and SHR. 8. These findings suggest that trabecular bone in SHR had a lower mineral status than that of SD rats not only in the adult but also in the young. This alteration may due to the abnormal mineralization mechanisms. Topics: Aging; Animals; Body Weight; Bone and Bones; Bone Density; Bone Development; Female; Hypertension; Male; Protein Synthesis Inhibitors; Rats; Rats, Inbred SHR; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Tetracycline | 1995 |
Alendronate increases skeletal mass of growing rats during unloading by inhibiting resorption of calcified cartilage.
Loss of bone mass during periods of skeletal unloading remains an important clinical problem. To determine the extent to which resorption contributes to the relative loss of bone during skeletal unloading of the growing rat and to explore potential means of preventing such bone loss, 0.1 mg P/kg alendronate was administered to rats before unloading of the hindquarters. Skeletal unloading markedly reduced the normal increase in tibial mass and calcium content during the 9 day period of observation, primarily by decreasing bone formation, although bone resorption was also modestly stimulated. Alendronate not only prevented the relative loss of skeletal mass during unloading but led to a dramatic increase in calcified tissue in the proximal tibia compared with the vehicle-treated unloaded or normally loaded controls. Bone formation, however, assessed both by tetracycline labeling and by [3H]proline and 45Ca incorporation, was suppressed by alendronate treatment and further decreased by skeletal unloading. Total osteoclast number increased in alendronate-treated animals, but values were similar to those in controls when corrected for the increased bone area. However, the osteoclasts had poorly developed brush borders and appeared not to engage the bone surface when examined at the ultrastructural level. We conclude that alendronate prevents the relative loss of mineralized tissue in growing rats subjected to skeletal unloading, but it does so primarily by inhibiting the resorption of the primary and secondary spongiosa, leading to altered bone modeling in the metaphysis. Topics: Alendronate; Analysis of Variance; Animals; Body Weight; Bone Development; Bone Resorption; Calcification, Physiologic; Calcium; Cartilage; Diphosphonates; Isotope Labeling; Male; Microvilli; Osteoclasts; Proline; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Tetracycline; Tibia; Weight-Bearing | 1994 |
The effect of dietary xylitol on dentin formation in ovariectomized rats.
Twenty-nine 3-month-old female Wistar rats were labeled by means of a single intraperitoneal tetracycline injection. Nineteen animals were subsequently ovariectomized, whereas a control group of 10 animals underwent sham operations. All the animals received the basal diet, and 10 of the ovariectomized animals were given an additional dietary xylitol supplementation (5%). Three months later the animals were killed by decapitation, and dentinal apposition on the molars was measured. The results indicate that supplementation of the diet with 5% xylitol had an attenuating effect on the enhanced dentin formation caused by ovariectomy, but the mechanism remains unsolved. Topics: Animals; Body Weight; Dentin; Dentinogenesis; Diet; Female; Fluorescence; Molar; Ovariectomy; Ovary; Rats; Rats, Wistar; Tetracycline; Xylitol | 1994 |
Preliminary findings on the effects of sex hormones on bone metabolism in anorexia nervosa.
We performed tetracycline double-labeled bone biopsies and serial bone densitometry on four patients with anorexia nervosa to determine the effects of various conditions of sex hormone replacement and body weight status. We found negligible bone mineral apposition rate in two patients with anorexia nervosa who were taking estrogen and progestin pills while weighing only 79% of normal. However, bone mineral apposition rate was normal in two patients with anorexia nervosa who took no sex hormones and remained amenorrheic while weighing 87% of normal. Histomorphometric analysis revealed a decrease in intracortical trabecular area by 57% and an increase in active osteoblastic surface area by 300%, comparing the subjects who were taking hormone replacement to those who were not. There was no direct evidence of increased resorption in any subject. Six months after biopsy, the two subjects taking sex hormones decreased lumbar bone mineral density by 1.9%, while the two taking no sex hormones remained amenorrheic, but increased bone mineral density by 1.3%. Therefore, we propose that sex hormone therapy in the presence of persistently low body weight might be of limited benefit for bone mineral apposition and density. Topics: Adolescent; Adult; Amenorrhea; Anorexia Nervosa; Body Weight; Bone Density; Densitometry; Energy Intake; Estrogen Replacement Therapy; Estrogens; Female; Humans; Progestins; Tetracycline | 1993 |
Short-term, preweaning treatment with tetracycline affects physical development and behavior in rats.
Tetracycline (TC) was administered indirectly to rat pups through maternal milk, giving mothers diluted TC solutions as a single source of drinking water, during 13-16 days of postnatal age (PND) in Experiment 1. In Experiment 2, using rats of a different strain, TC dose and its application period were reduced from 0.5 mg/ml to 0.25 mg/ml and from PND 13-16 to PND 13-15, respectively. In Experiment 3, TC was administered directly to the pups via stomach intubation during PND 13-16. The effects of these short-term treatments were tested in adulthood. Brain weight decreased, although no abnormal changes were found histologically in the cerebral cortex. Immobility time in the forced swimming test was decreased more in the TC group as compared to the controls. These results suggest that even a small amount of TC could affect physiological development and behavior. In Experiment 4, mothers were given TC in their drinking water (0.5 mg/ml) for 1 to 5 days, beginning on PND 12. On each of the treatment days, measurements were made of the weight of brain and body, and of the concentration of TC in the brain and in gastric curd of offspring. The greater the TC intake by dams was, the more remarkable was the decrease in the brain weight of offspring. TC concentration of gastric curd was on the order of 1-3.5 micrograms/g curd. Topics: Animals; Animals, Suckling; Behavior, Animal; Body Weight; Brain; Female; Male; Motor Activity; Organ Size; Physical Exertion; Pregnancy; Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects; Rats; Rats, Inbred F344; Tetracycline; Time Factors | 1993 |
Measurement of serum [3H]tetracycline kinetics and indices of kidney function facilitate study of the activity and toxic effects of bisphosphonates in bone resorption.
The [3H]tetracycline ([3H]TC) model is based on the observation that TC is released from the bones of rats prelabeled with [3H]TC via first-order kinetics, a factor directly reflecting the kinetics of bone resorption. In the present paper we applied the [3H]TC elimination model to rats treated with antiresorptive drugs. The validity of this model was evaluated by examining the effect of the bisphosphonate, 3-amino-1-hydroxypropylidene-1,1-bisphosphonate (ABP), and a novel bisphosphonate, dihydrogen disodium adipoylbisphosphonate (AdBP), on serum TC levels and the elimination rate constant. ABP and AdBP significantly inhibited the TC elimination rate. However, ABP treatment caused impairment of bone mineralization, renal dysfunction, and inhibition of somatic growth. It is concluded that antiresorptive effects of bisphosphonates could be evaluated by the [3H]TC model, but this model is limited to animals with normal kidney function. The experimental conditions provide a technically simple method which is sensitive enough to examine antiresorptive properties in a healthy animal and to detect adverse effects on the kidney. The activity of the novel bisacylphosphonate, AdBP, and lack of its adverse effects indicate the potential of this drug for clinical applications. Topics: Alkaline Phosphatase; Animals; Body Weight; Bone and Bones; Bone Resorption; Diphosphonates; Femur; Kidney; Pamidronate; Rats; Tetracycline | 1992 |
Vitamin D metabolites prevent vertebral osteopenia in ovariectomized rats.
The present study investigated the prophylactic effects of vitamin D metabolites and vitamin D metabolite combinations on static and dynamic, tetracycline-based, histomorphometric parameters in the axial skeleton of ovariectomized rats. Forty-three Fischer-344 rats (10 weeks old, 130 g each body weight, BW) were either bilaterally ovariectomized (OVX) or sham-operated (SHAM). The rats were allocated into the following groups: SHAM; OVX; OVX + 7.5 ng 1 alpha,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 [1,25(OH)2D3]/rat/day; OVX + 15 ng 1 alpha,24R,25-trihydroxyvitamin D3 [1,24,25-(OH)3D3]/rat/day; OVX + 75 ng 24R,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 [24,25(OH)2D3]/rat/day; OVX + 7.5 ng 1,25(OH)2D3/rat/day + 15 ng 1,24,25(OH)3D3/rat/day; OVX + 7.5 ng 1,25(OH)2D3/rat/day + 75 ng 24,25(OH)2D3/rat/day. The vitamin D metabolites were fed orally starting 4 weeks after surgery. Urine and blood samples were collected 12 and 16 weeks postovariectomy, respectively. Sixteen weeks after surgery, all rats were sacrificed, and the first lumbar vertebrae were processed undecalcified for histomorphometric analysis. Ovariectomy induced a highly significant reduction (P less than 0.001) of cancellous bone mass in the secondary spongiosa of the lumbar vertebral body. The bone loss in OVX rats was accompanied by a distinct elevation of all histomorphometric parameters of bone formation and resorption. 1,25(OH)2D3 and both vitamin D metabolite combinations significantly raised serum calcium levels and prevented the bone loss by inhibiting the increased bone resorption in OVX rats. In the applied dosage, 1,24,25(OH)3D3 and 24,25(OH)2D3 alone were ineffective in preserving the cancellous bone of the lumbar vertebra in OVX rats.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) Topics: Animals; Body Weight; Bone Diseases, Metabolic; Bone Resorption; Calcitriol; Disease Models, Animal; Drug Evaluation, Preclinical; Female; Humans; Hydroxycholecalciferols; Lumbar Vertebrae; Osteoporosis, Postmenopausal; Ovariectomy; Rats; Rats, Inbred F344; Tetracycline | 1992 |
Comparative toxicity and carcinogenicity studies of tetracycline and oxytetracycline in rats and mice.
Two-year toxicity and carcinogenicity studies of oxytetracycline hydrochloride and tetracycline hydrochloride, two structurally similar and widely used antibiotics, were performed in F344/N rats and B6C3F1 mice. Rats and mice were continuously exposed via their diet to the following levels of antibiotic: oxytetracycline HCl--rats 0, 25,000, or 50,000 ppm; mice 0,6,300, or 12,500 ppm; tetracycline HCl--rats and mice 0, 12,500, or 25,000 ppm. On a milligram per kilogram of body weight basis these exposures represent doses that are 20 to 140 times daily human therapeutic doses. Dose-related increased survival was noted among oxytetracycline-treated male rats and tetracycline-treated female rats and male mice, while treatment-related reduced body weight gain occurred in oxytetracycline- and tetracycline-treated mice. Microscopic changes included fatty metamorphosis and focal cellular change in livers of oxytetracycline-treated male rats and basophilic cytoplasmic and clear cell change in livers of tetracycline-treated male rats. The only neoplastic changes were a marginally increased trend in pheochromocytoma of the adrenal medulla (equivocal evidence only) among oxytetracycline-exposed male rats (12/50 controls, 19/50 low dose, 24/50 high dose) and an increased incidence of pituitary adenoma or adenocarcinoma among high-dose oxytetracycline-treated female rats (20/50 controls, 32/50 high dose). Although oxytetracycline and tetracycline appeared to increase the incidence of pituitary hyperplasia in high-dose male and female rats, respectively, the total incidence of proliferative changes (hyperplasia, adenoma, and adenocarcinoma) was not affected by antibiotic exposure. The results from these studies therefore support the notion that neither antibiotic is carcinogenic in rodents. There were several negative trends suggesting possible protective effects by both these tetracycline analogs against certain spontaneous neoplastic and non-neoplastic changes. Topics: Animals; Anticarcinogenic Agents; Body Weight; Carcinogens; Eating; Female; Male; Mice; Mice, Inbred Strains; Neoplasms, Experimental; Oxytetracycline; Rats; Rats, Inbred F344; Tetracycline | 1991 |
Research note: effect of tetracycline hydrochloride and oxytetracycline hydrochloride given via drinking water on early mortality of broiler chicks from twenty-eight-week-old dams.
The effect of tetracycline HCl and oxytetracycline HCl on early mortality in straight-run Peterson x Hubbard cross broiler chicks from 28-wk-old dams was studied. Treatments consisted of a sham-treated control, and groups treated with a tetracycline either HCl (25 mg/454 g of BW per day) or an oxytetracycline HCl (14.6 mg/454 g of BW per day). Each group was treated via the drinking water for the first 5 days after hatching. There were 24 replications per treatment with 54 chicks each. Birds were maintained at a density of 622.5 cm2 per chick. Chicks treated with tetracycline HCl and oxytetracycline HCl had significantly (P less than .05) improved livability when compared with the sham-treated controls both at 2 and 6 wk of age (1.00 and .83 versus 1.79 at 2 wk, and 2.79 and 3.29 versus 4.29% mortality at 6 wk, respectively). No significant differences in mortality were observed between tetracycline HCl-treated chicks and oxytetracycline HCl-treated chicks. At the end of the 6-wk trial, no differences between treatments were seen in the productive performance of the broilers. The observed differences in livability at 6 wk of age could increase the number of saleable broilers by 10 to 15 thousand per million chicks placed. Topics: Animals; Body Weight; Chickens; Drinking; Mortality; Oxytetracycline; Tetracycline | 1991 |
[2 cases of Whipple's disease with different outcomes].
A 45-year-old man developed migratory arthritis and fever, at first believed to be caused by rheumatoid arthritis. Whipple's disease was eventually diagnosed after a malabsorption syndrome had occurred and biopsies been taken from the distal duodenum and jejunum. The patient was cured after several months on tetracycline. In a second case, a 73-year-old woman, malabsorption of six months' duration resulting from Whipple's disease had brought about such deterioration that after hospitalisation she died despite a correct diagnosis and an appropriate treatment. Topics: Aged; Biopsy, Needle; Body Weight; Doxycycline; Drug Therapy, Combination; Female; Humans; Intestine, Small; Male; Middle Aged; Tetracycline; Whipple Disease | 1988 |
Histomorphometric study on growing condyle of rat.
The purpose of this study was to carry out the histomorphometric assay on the mandibular condylar tissue of the growing rats. Male rats of the Wistar strain at the age of 3, 4, 6, 8 and 10 weeks were used. All rats were injected intravenously with tetracycline and calcein, respectively. They were killed 12 hours after calcein injection. Before embedding in acrylic resin, 3 reference points were marked directly on each condyle to establish the reference plane for the histomorphometry on the ground section. After preparing the ground section, the growth rate of the condyle was obtained by measuring the distance of the two different fluorescent labeling lines. Furthermore, the age-related changes of the relative distribution of the bone, calcified cartilage and prebone (uncalcified bone matrix) were measured under a light microscope by using a grid on the eyepiece reticle. The number of osteoblasts and osteoclasts were also calculated in the same specimen. The following results were obtained: The thickness of the cartilaginous layer and the growth rate of the endochondral bone formation decreased with age. The relative ratio of the bone area in the subchondral tissue increased constantly with age. Topics: Aging; Animals; Body Weight; Bone Development; Cartilage; Fluoresceins; Male; Mandibular Condyle; Osteogenesis; Rats; Rats, Inbred Strains; Tetracycline | 1986 |
Role of vitamin D in neonatal skeletal development in rats.
The role of vitamin D in rat pup growth and skeletal development without the influence of nutritional factors was investigated. Pups from vitamin D-replete and vitamin D-deficient dams receiving identical amounts of milk for 20 days were compared. Body weight gain, femur ash content and histomorphometric analyses of diaphysial and distal femur were determined. Up to 20 days of age, growth and skeletal development of the pups were completely normal in the absence of vitamin D. Skeletal changes found in vitamin D deficiency were not observed, i.e., there was no increased volume of osteoid or lack of bone mineralization as demonstrated by tetracycline labeling and ash content. Only increased cortical porosity was found in vitamin D-deficient pups. Therefore, abnormalities previously attributed to vitamin D deficiency in neonatal rats can be corrected by sufficient milk consumption and are thus not a direct function of vitamin D. Topics: Animals; Animals, Newborn; Body Weight; Bone and Bones; Bone Development; Calcium; Female; Femur; Growth Plate; Lactation; Minerals; Pregnancy; Rats; Tetracycline; Vitamin D; Vitamin D Deficiency | 1986 |
Skeletal alterations in ovariectomized rats.
Female Sprague Dawley rats were subjected to either bilateral ovariectomy or sham surgery. Tetracycline derivatives were administered to each rat on two separate occasions to label sites of bone formation. All rats were sacrificed at 5 weeks postovariectomy and their proximal tibiae were processed undecalcified for quantitative bone histomorphometry. A twofold decrease in trabecular bone volume was noted in the proximal tibial metaphysis of ovariectomized rats. This bone loss was associated with elevated histomorphometric indices of bone resorption and formation. Ovariectomy increased osteoclast surface and numbers as well as osteoblast surface and numbers. Elevations in calcification rate and fractional trabecular bone surface with double tetracycline labels also suggest that bone formation was stimulated in ovariectomized rats. In addition, ovariectomized rats exhibited a greater rate of longitudinal bone growth relative to sham-operated control rats. These histomorphometric data indicate that ovariectomy induces marked bone loss and accelerated skeletal metabolism in rats. Topics: Animals; Body Weight; Bone and Bones; Bone Development; Bone Resorption; Castration; Female; Osteoblasts; Osteoclasts; Ovary; Rats; Tetracycline | 1985 |
Predisposing factors in Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia: effects of tetracycline, protein malnutrition, and corticosteroids on hosts.
Components of the immunosuppressive regimen used to reactivate latent Pneumocystis carinii infection were analyzed for their effects on the growth, nutrition, and lymphoid system of hosts. Rats that were administered either tetracycline or a low-protein (8%) diet alone for 7 weeks developed few abnormalities, but animals on the combined regimen developed lower body and lymphoid organ weights, lower serum albumin levels, and fewer circulating lymphocytes. Rats that were administered corticosteroids and tetracycline experienced severe wasting, debilitation, and generalized lymphocyte depletion; the low-protein diet increased the magnitude of these changes. Alterations in the frequency of occurrence of specific lymphocyte subsets occurred only in rats given corticosteroids and consisted mainly of a greater decline in peripheral blood T helper cells than in T suppressor cells. The data suggest that long-term tetracycline administration and a low-protein diet have a variety of adverse effects on the host which enhance the immunosuppressive properties of corticosteroids. Topics: Adrenal Cortex Hormones; Animals; Body Weight; Male; Organ Size; Pneumonia, Pneumocystis; Protein Deficiency; Rats; Rats, Inbred Lew; Spleen; Tetracycline; Thymus Gland | 1984 |
Protective effect on vitamin D2 on bone apposition from the inhibitory action of hydrocortisone in rats.
Using the technique of short interval sequential tetracycline labeling, it was documented that the apposition of mineralized bone matrix in adult male Sprague-Dawley rats was inhibited by hydrocortisone. The inhibition occurred as early as six days after the onset of the treatment and was dose dependent over a dose range of 0.62 to 20 mg per kg body weight per day. Vitamin D2 supplements by injection protected bone from this hydrocortisone action. 64 I. U. of vitamin D2 injected daily was able to prevent the inhibition of bone apposition by 20 mg per kg body weight per day of hydrocortisone. The results imply that vitamin D or its metabolites may compete with hydrocortisone in some cellular mechanisms and support the usefulness of vitamin D supplements in the treatment and the prevention of steroid-induced osteoporosis. Topics: Animals; Body Weight; Bone and Bones; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Drug Interactions; Ergocalciferols; Hydrocortisone; Kinetics; Male; Rats; Tetracycline | 1981 |
Tetracycline antibiotics should be avoided in patients with renal disease.
Topics: Acute Kidney Injury; Body Weight; Creatinine; Diabetic Nephropathies; Humans; Male; Middle Aged; Tetracycline; Urea | 1981 |
Elemental diets in the treatment of Crohn's disease.
Topics: Adolescent; Adult; Body Height; Body Weight; Child; Crohn Disease; Female; Flucytosine; Humans; Male; Middle Aged; Prednisone; Rifampin; Tetracycline | 1979 |
Factors responsible for weight loss in tropical sprue.
The respective roles of reduced dietary intake and malabsorption in the pathogenesis of weight loss in persons with chronic tropical sprue have been evaluated . Dietary intake was found to be significantly (P less than 0.001) less in a group of 45 patients with tropical sprue, all of whom had anorexia due to deficiency of folate and/or vitamin B12, than in a group of 51 healthy Puerto Ricans. Weight loss was equally prominent in those patients with tropical sprue who had normal absorption of fat and protein as in those who had excessive fecal loss and reduced absorption of these nutrients. Treatment of five sprue patients with folic acid or vitamin B12 for 2 weeks resulted in improved appetite and increased in dietary intake with weight gain in the absence of significant improvement in intestinal absorption. Treatment with oral tetracycline for a similar period of time in five other patients was not associated with vitamin repletion, return of appetite or weight gain. These observations indicate that reduced dietary intake resulting from anorexia caused by vitamin deficiency is a significant, and sometimes the most important, factor in the pathogenesis of weight loss in persons with chronic tropical sprue. Topics: Anorexia; Body Weight; Diet; Dietary Fats; Folic Acid; Humans; Intestinal Absorption; Lipid Metabolism; Nitrogen; Sprue, Tropical; Tetracycline; Vitamin B 12 | 1977 |
[Persistent diarrhea in rheumatic disease].
The case history of a 52-year-old male with weight loss, steatorrhea and arthritis is presented. During clinical pathological conference, Whipple's disease was strongly suggested. The diagnosis could be proved morphologically. Antibiotic therapy with tetracycline 1 g daily for three months caused a prompt improvement. Small bowel biopsy showed disappearance of PAS-containing macrophages. Topics: Body Weight; Carcinoma, Squamous Cell; Diarrhea; Head and Neck Neoplasms; Humans; Malabsorption Syndromes; Male; Middle Aged; Tetracycline; Whipple Disease | 1976 |
The roentgenographic and clinical findings in Whipple's disease. A review of 8 patients.
Out of 8 patients with Whipple's disease, 7 had roentgenographic findings consisting of slight dilatation of the small bowel, with thickening of the mucosal folds. The eighth patient had no abnormality on roentgenographic study. This series represents the first in which the roentgenographic changes have been quantitatively assessed. Confirmation of the diagnosis by biopsy is important because antibiotic treatment results in marked improvement both clinically and roentgenographically. Topics: Adult; Aged; Amenorrhea; Biopsy; Body Weight; Diagnosis, Differential; Diarrhea; Duodenum; Edema; Female; Fever; Follow-Up Studies; Humans; Intestinal Mucosa; Intestine, Small; Jejunum; Joint Diseases; Lymphadenitis; Male; Middle Aged; Pain; Pigmentation Disorders; Purpura; Radiography; Tetracycline; Whipple Disease | 1975 |
Dose and age dependent variations in effect of tetracycline on enamel formation in rat.
Incidence of rats with gross enamel lesions in response to tetracycline hydrochloride (TC) was studied in relationship to age, tooth type, and concentration of antibiotic in the injection fluid. Incidence was defined as percentage of animals with defects in at least one incisor or one molar. Serum levels were measured at various intervals in 4- and 75-day-old rats, which received a single i.p. injection with 130 mg/kg bw in concentrations of either 13 or 25 mg/ml saline. The study confirmed that the effect of TC on enamel varied with age of the animal and that the molar responded more readily than the incisor. Furthermore, the incidence was higher the higher the concentration of antibiotic. This effect appeared tied to a direct relationship between concentration and serum level. Serum levels declined more slowly in the younger than in the older rats, resulting in significantly higher levels 6, 24 and 48 h after dosing, which correlated with a more extensive labeling of the dentin in the young rats. The possible roles of serum levels, capillary supply and cell susceptibility are discussed in relation to differences in response with animal age, between tooth types, tooth surfaces and with age of the secretory cells. Topics: Age Factors; Amelogenesis; Animals; Body Weight; Dental Enamel; Incisor; Molar; Rats; Tetracycline; Time Factors | 1975 |
Gastrointestinal dysfunction in immunoglobulin deficiency. Effect of corticosteroids and tetracycline.
Idiopathic late-onset immunoglobulin deficiency in a young man was associated with achlorhydria and a severe intestinal malabsorption syndrome that did not respond to conventional therapy. Combined therapy with high doses of prednisone and tetracycline hydrochloride resulted in weight gain, cessation of diarrhea, improved absorption of water, fat, and vitamin B12, and production of gastric acid after stimulation with histamine. Serum immunoglobulin levels, however, did not increase. Topics: Achlorhydria; Adult; Age Factors; Body Weight; Celiac Disease; Cholecystokinin; Diarrhea; Drug Therapy, Combination; Humans; Immunoglobulin M; Immunologic Deficiency Syndromes; Malabsorption Syndromes; Male; Prednisone; Tetracycline; Vitamin B 12 | 1975 |
Pluricolor fluorescent labeling of mineralizing tissue.
Topics: Animals; Anthraquinones; Body Weight; Bone and Bones; Dentin; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Fluoresceins; Hematoporphyrins; Hindlimb; Injections, Intraperitoneal; Microscopy, Fluorescence; Rats; Skull; Staining and Labeling; Tetracycline | 1974 |
Measurement of growth and resorption of bone in the seventh caudal vertebra of the rat.
Topics: Animals; Biometry; Body Weight; Bone Development; Bone Resorption; Fluoresceins; Male; Microscopy, Ultraviolet; Rats; Spine; Staining and Labeling; Tetracycline; Time Factors | 1974 |
Bioassay of growth hormone, I, Determination of longitudinal bone growth with tetracycline in hypophysectomized rats.
Topics: Animals; Biological Assay; Body Weight; Cartilage; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Female; Growth Hormone; Hypophysectomy; Injections, Subcutaneous; Microscopy, Fluorescence; Pituitary Gland; Rats; Staining and Labeling; Stimulation, Chemical; Tetracycline; Tibia; Time Factors | 1974 |
Penicillium viridicatum mycotoxicosis in the rat. IV. Attempts to modify the tissue responses.
Topics: Animals; Body Weight; Castration; Cornea; Diet; Eye; Kidney; Liver; Male; Mycotoxins; Necrosis; Penicillium; Prednisolone; Rats; Reserpine; Scrotum; Skin; Stomach; Tetracycline; Time Factors; Tripelennamine | 1974 |
Effects of protein-calorie malnutrition on the jejunal mucosa of tetracycline-treated pigs.
Topics: Animal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena; Animals; Body Weight; Diet; Dietary Proteins; Epithelial Cells; Intestinal Mucosa; Jejunum; Leukocytes; Protein-Energy Malnutrition; Swine; Tetracycline | 1974 |
Pharmacokinetics and dosing of antimicrobial agents in renal impairment. I.
Topics: Age Factors; Aminoglycosides; Ampicillin; Anti-Infective Agents; Antifungal Agents; Body Weight; Carbenicillin; Cephalosporins; Cloxacillin; Creatinine; Dicloxacillin; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Female; Glomerular Filtration Rate; Humans; Kidney Diseases; Kinetics; Male; Nafcillin; Oxacillin; Penicillin G; Penicillins; Polymyxins; Sex Factors; Tetracycline | 1974 |
Bioassay of growth hormone. II. Determination of longitudinal bone growth with tetracycline in thyroxine-treated hypophysectomized rats.
Topics: Animals; Biological Assay; Body Weight; Cartilage; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Female; Growth Hormone; Hypophysectomy; Injections, Subcutaneous; Microscopy, Fluorescence; Pituitary Gland; Rats; Stimulation, Chemical; Tetracycline; Thyroxine; Tibia; Time Factors | 1974 |
Proceedings: Tropical sprue in Rhodesia.
Topics: Achlorhydria; Anemia, Megaloblastic; Anorexia Nervosa; Body Weight; Bone Marrow Cells; Celiac Disease; Diarrhea; Gastritis; Hemoglobinometry; Humans; Jejunum; Malabsorption Syndromes; Sprue, Tropical; Tetracycline; Vitamin B 12; Zimbabwe | 1974 |
Maternal pheromone.
Topics: Animals; Animals, Newborn; Body Weight; Cecum; Dietary Carbohydrates; Discrimination, Psychological; Drinking Behavior; Feces; Feeding Behavior; Female; Lactation; Maternal Behavior; Neomycin; Nesting Behavior; Pheromones; Pregnancy; Prolactin; Rats; Smell; Sucrose; Tetracycline | 1974 |
Blood pressure changes produced by kidney cross-transplantation between spontaneously hypertensive rats and normotensive rats.
Topics: Animals; Blood Pressure; Body Weight; Female; Hypertension, Renal; Kidney Transplantation; Male; Rats; Rats, Inbred Strains; Tetracycline; Transplantation, Homologous; Urea | 1974 |
[The influence of test-animal age on antibiotic toxicity indices].
Topics: Age Factors; Animals; Animals, Newborn; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Body Weight; Brain; Erythromycin Ethylsuccinate; Gentamicins; Idoxuridine; Injections, Intramuscular; Injections, Intravenous; Injections, Subcutaneous; Kanamycin; Keratitis, Dendritic; Kidney; Liver; Mice; Muscles; Neomycin; Penicillin G; Poly A-U; Spleen; Streptomycin; Tetracycline; Time Factors | 1974 |
Studies on unidentified growth factors. 1. Factor G, a growth factor for rats.
Topics: Amino Acids; Animals; Body Weight; Chromatography, Ion Exchange; Diet; Female; Growth; Growth Substances; Liver; Male; Neomycin; Plant Extracts; Rats; Tetracycline; Tissue Extracts; Vitamins; Yeast, Dried; Yeasts | 1974 |
Tetracycline poisoning in renal failure.
Seven cases are reported in which drugs of the tetracycline group produced a fall in the glomerular filtration rate. In six patients there was a primary underlying renal disease and renal impairment. All seven patients were made seriously ill by the antibiotic. Two patients required immediate haemodialysis; one died and the other continued on dialysis until transplanted. Another patient initially responded to intravenous fluids and protein restriction but his renal function deteriorated and four months later he began maintenance haemodialysis. Three patients required peritoneal dialysis. The seventh patient responded satisfactorily to conservative management. The medical and medicolegal complications arising from the use of tetracycline in patients with renal disease are discussed. Yet another plea is made that drugs of the tetracycline group other than doxycycline should not be given to patients with chronic renal failure. Topics: Adult; Aged; Body Weight; Creatinine; Diarrhea; Dietary Proteins; Female; Glomerular Filtration Rate; Humans; Infusions, Parenteral; Kidney Failure, Chronic; Male; Middle Aged; Nausea; Oxytetracycline; Peritoneal Dialysis; Renal Dialysis; Tetracycline; Urea; Vomiting | 1974 |
Yersiniosis in children.
Sixty-five strains of Yersinia enterocolitica were isolated from stool specimens obtained from 35 patients over a 12-month period. The microbiologic characteristics and drug sensitivities are reported and the clinical patterns of disease associated with the organism are described. Gastroenteritis affecting infants and young children is the most frequent manifestation. The data for 1972 show the same epidemiological trend as in preceding years. Topics: Adolescent; Bacteriophage Typing; Body Height; Body Weight; Child; Child, Preschool; Chloramphenicol; Diarrhea; Feces; Female; Humans; Infant; Male; Microbial Sensitivity Tests; Pasteurella; Pasteurella Infections; Salmonella Infections; Seasons; Serotyping; Skin Manifestations; Tetracycline | 1974 |
Malabsorption in overland travellers to India.
Thirty-four cases of malabsorption are described in young adults after brief periods of overland travel to India. Symptoms included diarrhoea, abdominal distension, and weight loss. Investigation revealed fat, xylose, and vitamin B(12) malabsorption with marked morphological changes in the mucosa. Lower levels of serum folate and vitamin B(12) were observed in those with protracted diarrhoea, but no anaemia developed. Malabsorption may persist for many months after return to the U.K. Most patients responded initially to antibiotics, but some subsequently relapsed. The reasons why these patients developed tropical sprue are discussed. Topics: Adult; Asia, Western; Biopsy; Body Weight; Celiac Disease; Diarrhea; Fats; Female; Folic Acid; Humans; India; Intestinal Absorption; Jejunum; Malabsorption Syndromes; Male; Tetracycline; Travel; Vitamin B 12; Xylose | 1974 |
Whipple's disease presenting as pleuropericarditis.
Topics: Biopsy, Needle; Body Weight; Celiac Disease; Female; Humans; Hypersensitivity, Delayed; Immunoglobulin A; Immunoglobulin G; Immunoglobulin M; Lymphopenia; Middle Aged; Penicillins; Pericarditis; Pleurisy; Tetracycline; Whipple Disease | 1973 |
Induction of leukemoid disease in mice by Mycoplasma fermentans.
Topics: Animals; Biological Assay; Body Weight; Bone Marrow Cells; Cortisone; Female; Gold Sodium Thiomalate; Immune Sera; Injections, Intraperitoneal; Leukemoid Reaction; Leukocyte Count; Lymphocytes; Male; Mice; Mice, Inbred BALB C; Mice, Inbred Strains; Mycoplasma; Mycoplasma Infections; Rabbits; Species Specificity; Spleen; Tetracycline | 1973 |
Sex difference in blood levels of some antibiotics.
Topics: Anti-Bacterial Agents; Body Weight; Chloramphenicol; Female; Humans; Male; Novobiocin; Rifampin; Sex Factors; Tetracycline; Time Factors | 1973 |
Effect of hypophysectomy on longitudinal bone growth in the rat.
Topics: Age Factors; Animals; Body Weight; Bone Development; Female; Fluorescence; Hypophysectomy; Microscopy, Fluorescence; Rats; Tetracycline; Tibia; Time Factors | 1973 |
The different effects of soluble and crystalline hydrocortisone on bone.
Topics: Animals; Body Weight; Bone and Bones; Bone Development; Bone Resorption; Crystallization; Dosage Forms; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Femur; Hydrocortisone; Male; Microscopy, Fluorescence; Osteoporosis; Rabbits; Radiography; Ribs; Solutions; Tetracycline; Time Factors | 1973 |
Effect of dose and administration period of growth hormone on longitudinal bone growth in the hypophysectomized rat.
Topics: Age Factors; Animals; Body Weight; Bone Development; Cartilage; Cattle; Cortisone; Depression, Chemical; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Female; Growth Hormone; Heart; Hypophysectomy; Injections, Subcutaneous; Methods; Microscopy, Fluorescence; Organ Size; Rats; Stimulation, Chemical; Tetracycline; Tibia; Time Factors | 1973 |
Effect of thyroxine and growth hormone on longitudinal bone growth in the hypophysectomized rat.
Topics: Animals; Body Weight; Bone Development; Cartilage; Cattle; Depression, Chemical; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Drug Synergism; Female; Growth Hormone; Heart; Hypophysectomy; Microscopy, Fluorescence; Organ Size; Rats; Stimulation, Chemical; Tetracycline; Thyroxine; Tibia; Time Factors | 1973 |
Fat malabsorption associated with bacterial colonization of a colon transplant: a case report.
Topics: Amino Acids; Ampicillin; Bacteria; Bacterial Infections; Barium Sulfate; Body Weight; Celiac Disease; Chloramphenicol; Colon; Dietary Fats; Esophagoscopy; Fats; Feces; Female; Gastroesophageal Reflux; Humans; Lipids; Malabsorption Syndromes; Manometry; Middle Aged; Postoperative Complications; Radiography; Tetracycline; Transplantation, Autologous; Vomiting | 1973 |
The effect of tetracycline on the hepatic secretion of triglyceride.
Topics: Animals; Ascorbic Acid; Body Weight; Cholesterol; Esters; Fatty Acids, Nonesterified; Female; Lipoproteins, LDL; Lipoproteins, VLDL; Liver; Male; Organ Size; Perfusion; Phospholipids; Rats; Sex Factors; Tetracycline; Time Factors; Triglycerides | 1972 |
Long-term follow-up of antibiotic-treated tropical sprue.
Topics: Anti-Bacterial Agents; Biopsy; Body Weight; Carotenoids; Cholesterol; Female; Folic Acid; Follow-Up Studies; Hemoglobinometry; Humans; Intestines; Iron; Male; Puerto Rico; Serum Albumin; Sprue, Tropical; Sulfathiazoles; Tetracycline; Vitamin B 12; Xylose | 1972 |
Comparative evaluation of the influence of some tetracyclines on chick embryo.
Topics: Animals; Body Weight; Calcium; Chick Embryo; Doxycycline; Growth; Metatarsus; Methacycline; Oxytetracycline; Tetracycline; Tibia | 1972 |
Bone repletion in calcium deficient rats fed a high calcium diet.
Topics: Animals; Body Weight; Bone Development; Bone Resorption; Calcification, Physiologic; Calcium, Dietary; Computers; Epiphyses; Fluorescence; Hypocalcemia; Periosteum; Rats; Stress, Mechanical; Tetracycline; Tibia; Time Factors | 1972 |
The vagaries of Whipple's disease.
Topics: Biopsy; Body Weight; Calcium; Diarrhea; Female; Folic Acid; Humans; Intestinal Mucosa; Jejunum; Middle Aged; Prednisone; Tetracycline; Vitamins; Whipple Disease | 1971 |
[Combined application of a corticosteroid and antibiotic in experimental leptospirosis].
Topics: Animals; Antibody Formation; Body Temperature; Body Weight; Drug Combinations; Leptospira interrogans; Male; Prednisolone; Rats; Tetracycline; Weil Disease | 1971 |
[Effect of tetracycline on embryogenesis in albino rats].
Topics: Abnormalities, Drug-Induced; Alkaline Phosphatase; Animals; Ascorbic Acid; Body Weight; Corpus Luteum; Depression, Chemical; Embryo, Mammalian; Female; Fertility; Fetal Death; Gestational Age; Glycogen; Histocytochemistry; Nucleic Acids; Organ Size; Placenta; Placenta Diseases; Pregnancy; Rats; Tetracycline | 1971 |
Psittacosis.
Topics: Adult; Anorexia Nervosa; Body Weight; Female; Humans; Male; Middle Aged; Psittacosis; Tetracycline | 1971 |
Furazolidone in paediatric cholera.
Tetracycline continues to be an effective antimicrobial agent in the clinical control of cholera but because of its high cost, relatively short shelf-life and recent reports of increased resistance of vibrios to tetracycline in vitro, alternative antimicrobial agents have been tested. Furazolidone, effective against cholera caused by the El Tor biotype in adults, was found to be as effective as tetracycline in reducing the volume and duration of diarrhoea in children with classical cholera and, given over a period of 7 days, only slightly less effective in reducing duration of vibrio excretion.Therapy with an antimicrobial agent over a period of 7 days was associated with a significantly smaller rise in vibriocidal antibody titre (of no clinical significance) in the youngest age-group studied; this was probably due to a diminished antigenic stimulus from the primary infection. Undernourished children showed a poorer response to anti-microbial therapy.The study indicated that furazolidone is a reasonable alternative to tetracycline in the treatment of cholera. Topics: Antibody Formation; Body Weight; Child; Child, Preschool; Cholera; Diarrhea; Feces; Female; Furazolidone; Humans; Male; Tetracycline; Time Factors; Vibrio | 1970 |
Bone growth in the hypovitaminotic A calf.
Topics: Absorption; Animals; Body Height; Body Weight; Bone Development; Bone Diseases, Developmental; Bone Resorption; Brain; Cattle; Cerebrospinal Fluid; Choroid Plexus; Cisterna Magna; Diet; Dura Mater; Fluoresceins; Histocytochemistry; Intracranial Pressure; Lumbar Vertebrae; Male; Metacarpus; Metaplasia; Methods; Organ Size; Parotid Gland; Perfusion; Pineal Gland; Pituitary Gland; Skull; Tetracycline; Vitamin A; Vitamin A Deficiency | 1970 |
[Tetracycline concentration processes in the human aqueous humour following systematic administration].
Topics: Agar; Age Factors; Aged; Aqueous Humor; Body Weight; Cataract Extraction; Diffusion; Eye Diseases; Humans; Infections; Methods; Tetracycline; Time Factors | 1970 |
Mycotoxicosis induced in guinea pigs and rats by corn cultures of Penicillium viridicatum.
Topics: Animals; Bile Ducts; Body Weight; Cecum; Cholangitis; Culture Media; Diet; Epididymis; Food Microbiology; Guinea Pigs; Hepatitis; Hyperplasia; Liver; Male; Mycotoxins; Necrosis; Penicillium; Plant Poisoning; Rats; Scrotum; Stomach Diseases; Tetracycline; Zea mays | 1970 |
Toxicologic, reproductive, and teratogenic studies with a tetracycline phosphate complex-sulfamethizole formulation.
Topics: Aniline Compounds; Animals; Animals, Newborn; Body Weight; Bronchi; Dogs; Female; Fertility; Food; Gestational Age; Lactation; Male; Mice; Organ Size; Phosphates; Pregnancy; Rabbits; Rats; Reproduction; Sulfamethizole; Sulfathiazoles; Tetracycline; Thyroid Gland | 1970 |
Experimental massive intestinal resection. Comparison of surgical measures and spontaneous adaptation.
Topics: Adaptation, Physiological; Animals; Body Weight; Celiac Disease; Dogs; Fats; Feces; Gastrointestinal Motility; Ileum; Intestine, Small; Jejunum; Methods; Nutritional Physiological Phenomena; Postoperative Complications; Tetracycline | 1970 |
[Effect of tetracycline on the functional state of the adrenal cortex].
Topics: Administration, Oral; Adrenal Glands; Animals; Body Weight; Corticosterone; Guinea Pigs; Hydrocortisone; Injections, Intraperitoneal; Rats; Secretory Rate; Stimulation, Chemical; Tetracycline; Time Factors | 1970 |
Appositional growth rate in rat bones using the tetracycline labelling method.
Topics: Age Factors; Animals; Body Weight; Bone Development; Femur; Male; Microscopy, Fluorescence; Periosteum; Rats; Tetracycline; Tibia | 1969 |
[Effect of tetracycline on ascorbic acid content in different body tissues of guinea pigs].
Topics: Adrenal Glands; Animals; Ascorbic Acid; Body Weight; Brain Chemistry; Female; Guinea Pigs; Intestine, Small; Kidney; Liver; Myocardium; Oxidation-Reduction; Spleen; Tetracycline | 1969 |
[On the treatment of the cystic pancreatic and pulmonary fibrosis with doxycycline].
Topics: Blood Sedimentation; Body Weight; Child; Child, Preschool; Cystic Fibrosis; Female; Humans; Infant; Infant, Newborn; Leukocyte Count; Lung Diseases; Male; Pulmonary Fibrosis; Staphylococcal Infections; Staphylococcus; Tetracycline | 1969 |
Lethal effects of antibiotics in hamsters.
Topics: Animals; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Body Weight; Cricetinae; Drug Tolerance; Erythromycin; Leucomycins; Penicillin G; Streptomycin; Tetracycline | 1969 |
Procion dyes as matrix markers in growing bone and teeth.
Topics: Animals; Body Weight; Bone and Bones; Bone Development; Cats; Dental Cementum; Dentin; Dogs; Haplorhini; Hematoporphyrins; Injections, Intraperitoneal; Mice; Microscopy, Fluorescence; Microtomy; Odontogenesis; Rabbits; Rats; Staining and Labeling; Tetracycline; Triazines | 1968 |
[Methylenecycline in urology (rondomycin)].
Topics: Age Factors; Body Weight; Child; Enterobacter; Escherichia coli Infections; Female; Humans; Male; Methacycline; Neisseria gonorrhoeae; Proteus Infections; Staphylococcal Infections; Tetracycline; Urinary Tract Infections; Urologic Diseases | 1968 |
Bone growth in protein deficiency. A study in rhesus monkeys.
Topics: Animals; Body Weight; Bone and Bones; Bone Development; Haplorhini; Hydroxyproline; Male; Osteoporosis; Protein Deficiency; Tetracycline | 1968 |
[Effect of tetracycline and morphocycline on some liver functions in animals].
Topics: Anesthesia; Animals; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Body Weight; Fats; Guinea Pigs; Hexobarbital; Liver; Male; Morpholines; Rats; Sleep; Tetracycline | 1968 |
The healing pattern of an experimentally-induced defect in the rat femur studied with tetracycline labeling.
Topics: Age Factors; Animals; Body Weight; Bone and Bones; Bone Regeneration; Femur Neck; Microscopy, Fluorescence; Rats; Tetracycline; Wound Healing | 1968 |
[On the pharmacology of olemorphocycline].
Topics: Animals; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Anura; Blood Pressure; Body Temperature; Body Weight; Cilia; Depression, Chemical; Dogs; Epithelium; Fats; Inflammation; Liver; Mice; Muscles; Oleandomycin; Rabbits; Rats; Respiration; Tetracycline; Vasodilator Agents; Veins | 1968 |
Method of estimating relative absorption of a drug in a series of clinical studies in which blood levels are measured after single and/or multiple doses.
Topics: Absorption; Adult; Anthropometry; Biological Assay; Body Surface Area; Body Weight; Capsules; Child; Dosage Forms; Humans; Novobiocin; Tetracycline | 1967 |
Chlortetracycline and mouse intestinal wall.
Topics: Animals; Body Weight; Chlortetracycline; Female; Germ-Free Life; Histamine; Intestinal Mucosa; Intestines; Male; Mice; Organ Size; Serotonin; Tetracycline | 1967 |
[Post-natal development of the female mouse after treatment of the pregnant mother and progeny with tetracyclines].
Topics: Abortion, Spontaneous; Animals; Animals, Newborn; Body Weight; Chlortetracycline; Female; Mice; Oxytetracycline; Pregnancy; Pregnancy, Animal; Tetracycline | 1967 |
Short-term toxicity and observations on certain aspects of the pharmacology of a unique tetracycline--minocycline.
Topics: Alanine Transaminase; Animals; Aspartate Aminotransferases; Blood Chemical Analysis; Body Weight; Calcium; Chemical Phenomena; Chemistry; Dogs; Eating; Female; Haplorhini; Injections, Intravenous; Male; Potassium; Rats; Tetracycline | 1967 |
Morphologic effects of minocycline in laboratory animals.
Topics: Anemia, Hemolytic; Animals; Animals, Laboratory; Body Weight; Dogs; Female; Haplorhini; Hyperplasia; Male; Mice; Microscopy, Electron; Pigmentation; Rats; Tetracycline; Thiouracil; Thyroid Gland | 1967 |
Actinomycosis of the lung coexisting with pulmonary tuberculosis. Report of a case.
Topics: Actinomycosis; Adult; Body Weight; Chloramphenicol; Diagnosis, Differential; Humans; Male; Penicillins; Pneumonectomy; Radiography, Thoracic; Sulfisoxazole; Tetracycline; Tuberculosis, Pulmonary | 1966 |
Subclinical small-intestinal disease in East Pakistan.
Topics: Adult; Body Weight; Folic Acid; Humans; Intestinal Absorption; Malabsorption Syndromes; Pakistan; Social Conditions; Tetracycline; Vitamin B 12; Xylose | 1966 |
[Concentration of tetracyclines in serum after oral and intravenous administration].
Topics: Animals; Body Weight; Dosage Forms; Female; Humans; Injections, Intravenous; Male; Mice; Rabbits; Rolitetracycline; Tetracycline | 1965 |
THE HEALING OF A GINGIVAL WOUND IN PROTEIN-DEPRIVED, ANTIBIOTIC-SUPPLEMENTED ADULT RATS.
Topics: Anti-Bacterial Agents; Body Weight; Gingiva; Pathology; Pharmacology; Protein Deficiency; Rats; Research; Tetracycline; Wound Healing | 1964 |
THE CHRONIC ORAL TOXICITY OF OXYTETRACYCLINE HC1 AND TETRACYCLINE HC1 IN THE RAT, DOG AND PIG.
Topics: Animals; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Antibiotics, Antitubercular; Blood Cell Count; Blood Urea Nitrogen; Body Weight; Dogs; Epididymis; Hematocrit; Hemoglobins; Humans; Male; Oxytetracycline; Pathology; Pharmacology; Pituitary Gland; Rats; Research; Swine; Testis; Tetracycline; Toxicology; Urea | 1964 |
[Effect of tetracycline hydrochloride on the appearance of ossification nuclei in the rat embryo].
Topics: Animals; Body Weight; Bone Development; Fetus; Rats; Tetracycline | 1964 |
Relationship between body weights and antibiotic blood concentrations.
Topics: Anti-Bacterial Agents; Body Weight; Body Weights and Measures; Humans; Protein Synthesis Inhibitors; Tetracycline | 1957 |